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)

-,.

•

January 20. 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-:-Point P11111nt, W. Va.

PaQa D-8- Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern Airlines. suspends ~perations Friday
later, scheduled a news confer- Shugrue, appointed to run the
oracarrlerwlllcomeina!ldplck
ence forlOa.m. EDTSatunSay In airline In AprU, convinced U.S.
up the pieceS," he said.
Miami to,dlscuss the reasons for Bankruptcy Judge Burton LlSeveral parties, lncludiDI
the shutdown and 1ts fland In late November to grant Trans World Alrllnes Inc., have
ramifications.
·
the alrllne access to up to $135 expressed Interest In acquiring.
•'It Is a terribly sad time for all million In cash raised through
parts of Eastern's operations.
of us, " said Eastern spokeswo- . asiet sales.
But Eastern said Friday It had
man Karen Ceremsak. "The
Llfland granted Easter!I'S renot taken steps to convert Its •
employees here perfonned mira- quest over the objections of
Chapter 11 bankruptcy case to
cles over the past two year to creditors.
Chapter 71lquldatlon, despite the
bring an airline that had been
At the time, Shugrue said the
shu !down. ·
Allho~~gb Eastern Is smaller
grounded (and)' put It back up In money would allow Eastern to
tJte air."
,
·
cont1n11e operations through
todaythanltwasprlortothel989
Union officials expressed re- ·.. March, by which time he prostrike, a shutdown ·could stU!
gret, and the belief that East· . jected the airline would reach the
t'nconvenlence thousands of pasern's collapse could ·have bee!\ break-even point.
sengers. The alrllne carried
more than 1.4 million passengers
avoided had the carrier settled , But Breen of the pilots uniOn
Its long dlspl!te wt.t h unionized said Eastern, which may have
during December. ,
employees.
been losing as much as $3 mllllon
Easterp has beep able to keep
"It Is a real tragec!y;" said a day, ranoutofcashearUerthan
Its planes ai'oft despite Its huge
Frank Ortis, president of Local Shugrue expected.
losses by selllng assets. Money
702 of the International Assocla' 'They are out of cash, "· he
from !hose asset sale~ went Into
tlon of Machinists, one of three
said. ' 1t Is our upderstandlng' an escrow account.
.
Although there Is llttle . mo~:il
unions that struck Eastern on that Eastern was loslngabout$3
. March 4, 1989, forcing the carrier million a day."
left In that account for unsecured
Into bankruptcy five days later.
Eastern had bet!n seeking
creditors of the airline, who are
"It's a shame that (thealrllne)
Investment partners ln. recent
owed about$1 bllllon, more than
•
where most of the macl!lnlsts put weeks to-help It Implement a new
$50 million had been set aside for
·agreed
that
aq.
u
aculture
'
s
hould
·
.
In
most
of
their
adult
life.
had
to
business
plan~
·
ticket holders In the event of a
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) '- at lhe state level, .a griculture
be
·
regulated
the
same
way
as
come
to
this
point.
It
could
have
Ortis
of
the
lAM
expressed
shutdown.
,
Aquaculture - commercial fish departments or il.a tural resource
agriculture,
while
regulators.
dis·
been
averted
If
they
had
sought
hope
that
a
white
knight
may
still
Eastern
said
the money Is
farming - could supply 10 departments?''
agreed.
Producers,
researchers
·
Floyd suggests that all,-agenpercent of the U.S. m eat supply
and Extenslim personnel agreed labor peace," he said. The lAM emerge.
•
more than adequate to relmremalns on strike against
"We are1 . hopeful that a person.
burse ticket holders.
by the year 2000, accordlqg to a cles with an lnterestlnregulatlrig
fisheries management specialist aquaculture develop a unified
that statebelongs
jurisdiction
for aqua· Eastern.
'.
r:======================~
culture
In agriculture
permit process to both promote
at Ohio State University.
rather than natural re~ource or ·
The airline's . demise caused
"Fish consumption In the Uni- the Industry and protect public
little surprise, coming as It did at
game and fish departments.
ted States has been Increasing Interests. Such a process makes
"We askecl people about con- the e11d ofa IODI, uphill battle for
since 1980," Pete Cole says. It easier for producers to begin an
survtval.
trolling birds that prey on fish,
"Ocean harvests and Imports are a quaculture operation and ' such
FAMILY PRACTICE
as
cormorants
and
herons,"
"We have been , Sf~tlclpat\ilg
not going to be able to meet comply with regulations,
Floyd says. "Producers stroqgly thls, :•·sald E :J . Steen, a spokesFloyd and others from the
Increasing consumer demands."
man tor the Air Line Pilots
supported a right .to kill pretJa- Association, another union that
But policy makers have to School of Natural . Resources
clous birds on their property ·
decide how to regulate the use of gl!ther«id Information from aqua- without
a , permit: The s.a me struck Eastern In 1989. ALfA
the natural resources required culture producers, researchers,
group
said
they would be unwll- ended -Its strike In No\Tember
by the Industry, says Don Floyd, · Cooperative Extension Service
ling
to
Invest
money In tech- 1989, although relations With
Ohio State natural ·resources personnel, -regvlators and repreniques
to
keep
predacious
birds Eastern remain rancorous.
.sentatlves of environmental
'
policy specialist.
from
eating
their
fisb."
"We knew there was no way
Aquaculture, like agriculture, groups to determine which aquaThe groups, differed on the
they could last beyond Monday,"
culture policy Issues need
Is based on natural resources.
1
Breen said.
ssue of food safety, wlthenvlro!lEastern was able to restore
Public policy plays a big role in attention. ,
The
SIJrvey
included
Illinois,
mentalists most stroqgly suppor- . service In the wake of the 1989
how Individuals use public ret!ve of regulating the use of
sources, such as high-quality Indiana, Iowa, · Kansas, Michl·
pesticides,
antibiotics and chem·
strike by hiring replacement
water, to produce food for profit. gan, Mlnneso~ Missouri, Ne1 1 b
tt.
Is
Re 1
pilots, and It financed Its
ca s y aquacu ,_ur ts.
gu a- ongoing operations by selllng
Expanding aquaculture produc- braska, North Dakota, Ohio,
tors and environmentalists, un·
tion raises several slgnlfican t South Dakota and Wisconsin. It like
producers and, researchers,
assets, Including Its profitable
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
was funded by the U.&amp;.DepartpoUcy Issues, he says. .
age
ctes
to
Northeast
shuttle
and
Its
Latin
want
public,
health
11
''
"One .Jmportant Issue Is who ment of Agriculture and Michi25TH
&amp;
JEFFE~ON A VENUE
protect
consumers
from
chemt.
American
routes.
Will regulate · the aquaculture gan State University through the
Eastern remained unproflta·
cal 'c ontamination of privately
POINT PLEASANT, WV.
lndu'sll'Y," Floyd says. "Should It North Central Regional Aquacul·
cultured fish. All groups agreed
ble, however. The airline posted
ture
Program.
·
·
·
·
be regulated the same as agriculthat some regulation Is' n~es- ' an operating loss of about $355
. Producers .a!ld researchers
ture, and who will administer it
sary but differed on what type of
mWIO!I for the first three months
agency should be In charge,
of 1990.
Floyd says.
Company efforts to restore

By DON FINEFR~K
UPI Bualaess Writer
MIAMI (UPI) - Financially
troubled Eastern Airlines suspended operations at midnight
Friday' In a move expected to
strand thousands of p;1ssengers
at airports throughout the United
States. The shut down ended the
carrier's 22-month ba ttle !or
survtvaL
The airline was obliged to park
Its planes and suspend Its 800
dally flights after running out of
cash. Eastern has.b een operating
under Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection since March 1989,
Eastern said a ll · scheduled

Ohio Lottery

Bills and_.

flights after midnight were can- passengers at airports throughceled, and all emplOyees except out the United States and Canreservations agents were In- !lda ..However, the shutdown was
structed ·not to report to work expected to have the largest
Impact In Atlanta, where East·
unless notified.
American Alrllnes In Fort ern maintained Its only hub
Worth. Texas, announced separ- operation, and In Miami, Its
ately that It would hOnor all headquarters city.
Easter!\ said all passengers
Eastern tickets.
American also said it asked the hokilng tickets , for flights after
Department of Transportation midnight Friday I!VOuld ~elve a
·
.
for emergency authority to oper· · full refund.
The fate of Eastern's 19,000
a te Eastern's routes connecting
Miami and Tampa to Toronto, full-time employees was, uncer·
Canada, and New York's La taln. The eompally, whlcll began
Guardia Air port to Montreal, . mall service In 1928 and added
passe11ger ·service two years
. Canada.
Eastern's collapse could af~t

Group~

have diverse·ideas
about commercial ·fish fartns

· ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

'

~iants advance
to ~uper Bowl

Piek-4-: 0943
Cuds: Q-H; 5-C;
10-D;S.S
Super Lotto
3-8-12-33-34-39
Kicker 131714

Page3
•

..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Januiry 21, 1991

Vol.41, No.119
Caryrtrtecl 1891

May use
POWs as human.shields
.
.

'

-:

&amp;aqi.
.

.

.

.

'

· flyers and Issued a radio message Monday threatening to US!!
Iraq, wagllig war• from the
prisoners of war · as human
.. skies and through the airwaves,
shields.
. · :tired Scud missiles Into Saudi
Secre~ry of Defe!lse Dick
.Arabia, paraded men on televlCheney condemned the threat
:slon Identified as captured allied , and said mlstreatm~nt of POWs
By DAVID AL:i!:XANDER

Ualted Pret~s ID&amp;er'na&amp;ton&amp;l ·

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl)
plan around such problems and
Hall of all businesses started will even make a few sacrifices, he
tali In the first two years. For says.
. 'family -run ~slnesses, survival
If the next generation Isn't
1
·
can be even harder.
qualified to take over the busi"The simple fact Is that smali ness, F;rven says now Is the time ·
businesses survtvlng -Into a· third
to start training or to consider
generation are qulte uncomhlrllftmanagement expertise.
mon," Bernard Erven says.
' 'The key has to be an up front
"When you add the additional and reallstlg analysts of the
stiess of that business being situation, " he says. "You can't
family run, the chance of success be naive and say, 'Of course
Is even sUmmer."
Johnny and Jane will continue
And that, says the Ohio State the business.' Maybe they don't
University ' agrlcultur;ll econo- 'll'ilnt to. Maybe they just don't
mist, means families have to · have It In them . Sit down now and
take some extraordinary steps If find out Then figure out ways to
they want a ·business to live on. · make sure they can affqrd to
· Family farms, grocery stores, continue If they want to." ·
day care centers-they all face
Start by writing goals for the
the challenges of competing with business and having each busllar&amp;er firms and With the differ- n~ss partner write down personal
Ing goals of all the Individuals goals. Knowing all these aspiraInvolved.
tions up front makes It easter to
"If you look at the chara~terls­ spot any potential conflicts. '
tlcs of the small business. none of
thla Is surprising, " Erven says,
.., ''They're usually dependent on
one to three key people and those
that aren't farms tend to be
Continued from D-1
. aimed at a niche market."
1
Niche markets may erode ing Ohio Power, have been 'widely
easily, and concentrated respon- recognized for numerous environslbillty makes survtval harder If meow achievements, among diem
one person leaves the business the construction of die first coolil)g
for any reason. he says.
tower in this bemispbere in order to
. "When you throw famlly probminimize power plants' impact on
lems on top of business problems, . rivers, preservation of muuel beds
It's no ·wonder so few family in the Ohio River, the donttioo of
businesses survtv_e many genera· . redaimed. surf~mined land to the
· International Center for the Preser'!Ions," he says.
Size Is part of the problem vation of Wild Animals for use as a
some businesses are just too
wildlife preServe and JeSWCh
small to be competitive. Others
facility, and ~ development of
·
have trouble building and main· · wetlands areas. ....
talntng the management exper·
ttse needed to keep a business
altve.
And then there are famlt¥
problems.
Divorce, health, changing career goals a!ld raising chlldr~n
have a major Impact on the
COMPLI'IE STOCI llitl45
workplace In a family business,
Erven says.
If the family wants the busiCOMPLm STOCI
ness to thrive Into anothe r
generation, It's going to have to

°

profits
crippled
recent
months were
by rlsl!lg
jet fuelIncosts,
a ' •-----------------~~~~~------•
slowln(lkeconomy, and lingering
doubts about the safety of the

COLONY THEATRE

'

4514

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IMIAIM MTIIIEtS SAT/WI I
~Ill lllliitfT TVESDAr

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1 :00,3:10
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AT

FINMUL

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

IHHH

a.

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Ulll ll iH

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Only 58,000 Low Miles. Black with Burgundy Velour Trim.
Loaded With Optional V-8 eng.
Shows Exceptional Carel · ·

'

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--

SUITS &amp; SPOITCOA

Continued from D·1·
nile 1.23 to 303.95. Advances led
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111ue1 traded. The price of an
aver81t ahare gained 4 cents.
compo11te volume totaled
u,g1,1811 ahares vs. 23, 628,230
tnded Tbtll'lday.
Sa1«J1011 Phlbro led the Amex

U lllt' ; H f."ll~ tn

1987 Pontiac Bonneville

s•

OlE Mllll
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ADIISSIOI 11.10

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Come Grow with Us.

Cheney

Allied warplanes hunt Scuds

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
•~~o...:
~g

~rimes

and nip&lt;)rteq that allied borrtblqg Mo!lday. Patriot air-defense mls- ported hearing "a big blast" near
-hi!.d heavily damaged Iraq's air slles ~Ired by the United States what may have been either
defenses and chemical .and nu- destroyednlneScudsandthe10th downtown Dhahran or nearby
fell Into the Persian GuU, Pen-. Khobar on the guU , Other witcle'ar facilities.
nesses reported )leartng three
Saddam's forces launched 10 lagon officials said.
Scuds Into .Saudi Arabia In two
In the first assault Sunday explosions.
attacks late Su!lday and early . night, Iraq launched three Scuds
President Bush, In Maryland
toward eastern Saudi Arabia . at Camp David for the weekend ,
Pentagon spokesman Pete WIIU- provided updates on the war by
ams said the rockets were
phone Sunday to Saudi Klqg
destroyed by three of five Patri- Fahd, British Prime Minister
otS flreil by U.S. forces.
.
John Major, French President
,Seven Scuds were launched
Francois. Mltterrand and Egypearly Monday, Alr Force Lt. Col.
tian Pre~ldent HosnL Mubarak,
Mike Gallagher salr;lln the Saudi said White House spokesman Bill
Harlow.
capital of Riyadh. He said four
Allied warplanes, meanwhile,
were downed near Riyadh. and
pounded Iraqi targets desp(te
two near the port city of
Dhahran.
some problems with the weather.
"Six of the Scuds were shot
U.S. officials urged Iraqi soldiers
on the Saudi-Kuwaltl border to
down by Patriot missiles. The
Scud missile landllli In the water . tay down" their arms and surdid not require eJiiagement,"· render before a bloody ground
Gallagher said. "We ·have no _war Is mounted.
Elements of the 82nd Airborne
reports yet of damage or Injury."
tie could not provide an explaDlvlslo!' a11d the Screaming
Eagles · ot the 101st Airborne
nation of a crater In R;lyadh that
reporters said they saw after the . DivisiOn were moving to forward
missile attacks:
· positiOns Sunday near the north·
To- date, all Scud a,t tacks
ern frontier that separates Saudi
against Saudi Arabia and Israel
Arabia from Iraq and occupied
hitve Involved high-explosive
Kuwait.
conventlonar warheads, not
"We are repositioning In an
chemically tipped warheads,
assembly area mirth along the
border to conduct offensive oper- .
despite fears Iraq would employ
allons If we are told," said CoL
Its chemical weapons, the spokesman said.
.
Ron Rokosz, commander of the
During the first Scud attack,
82nd Airborne's 2nd Brigade.
United Press International reU.S. combat casualties, most
. porter Jonathan Ferzlger reContinued on J)age 6
. . . .,,";
i
.....,. .. , '
' '

would cpnstltute a "war crime."
He said Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's plan to use human
shields would not deter the allied
bombing campaign.
The United .S tates Intercepted
the Scuds with Patriot missiles

airline.
Last fall, Eastern's unsecured
creditors, who are owed about $1
billion, openly called for the
liquidation of the airline. ·
But Eastern trustee Martin

~46

1 Section, 10 Pogea 26 C:.ntt
A Muhlmedio Inc. NewapopOf

. .

aJ constitutes war,

(104) 675·1675

"If aquaculture Is to grow, we
must deal quickly and effectively
with the food safety issue," Floyd
says, •'The lack of a federal
seafood Inspection bill hl!lders
the expans Ion f t he Industry. ..
Major support for 'expandlqg
. aquaculture comes from CQnsumer concerns wtth health and
nutrition, Floyci ·says. If poor
processing methods or chemical
residues become an' Issue, consu·
mer Interest Will drop. he says.

zo..

en .1ne

a1

•

Low tonight ·near , five. ·
Sunny Tuesday. JDgh In low

••

••

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC ,
WEIGHT CONTROL

. Survival /of small
family-run business ~
takes more
than money
.

Piek-3: 416

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,.

Gallipolis, Ohio
i

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.

.f.-:

BIRCHFIELD FUNERAL HOME OPENS Tbe Blrcblleld Funeral Home In Rnllan~
· ormerly Huater Fuaeral Home, is OPen for , . ness. , Open bouse -w u observed ove tbe
weekend wltb approximately 100 In attendance.
Pictnred Is tbe Blrtbfield, family, 1-r, Mr. and

Mrs: Howard C. Blrcbflel!l, Jeffrey C. Bln:blleld,

Julia Jyl Blrcbfield a~ James Blrcbfleld, owner.
Bln:bfltld stated that be bas ~ived bis licenses
1
, from botb tbe Oblo and West Vlr11lnla Embal·
mers and Fuaeral Directors. He also has 8n Oblo
Insurance Ucense to sell pre-need funerals.
'
'

· RIYADll, Saudi Arabia (UPI)
- Allied warplanes are aggressively- trying to pinpoint and
destroy Iraq' s remaining Scud
mlsslle launchers to stop attacks
that have triggered warning
· sirens In two major Saudi cities,
mllltary officials said Monday .
And ·Air Force Maj. Gen.
Burton Moore, briefing reporters
on developments In the fifth day
of the war, blasted Iraq's treatrn,ent of coalition pilots and
crewmen apparelltiY now held as
prisoners of war.
Moore also said the allies have
downed two more Iraq I aircraft
for a total of 11 and lost a Navy
F-14 Tomcat, which carries a
crew of two, In the most recent
round of attacks. Allied planes
flew another 1,100 sorties against
Iraqi targets, brlnglqg the
number of sorties to 8,100. Nine
. U.S. aircraft and five allied
planes have gone down to hostile

..

fire.
He said the allies have "not
achieved
100 percent of our
Asked by a reporter · from
against
the fixed sites,
objectives
Kuwaiti television what message
and
tbe Scud
the
mobile
sites
he had for Kuwaitis trapped In a
missile capability" and It conbattleground, Moore said:
tinues to be a priority target.
"Keep the lalth. "
Moore said the launchers In·
"We continue to aggressively
pursue (Saddam Hussein's)
volved In a missile attack on
fixed and mobile Scud capabll- Sunday have beeri attacked and
tles. .. . Results of his effort to •'we have taken some or them out
(but) we are nowhere near
launch ·Scuds both yere a11d 111
Israel have been very Ineffec- . completing our campaign
objectives ."
tive," said Moore.
. '

Middleport residents asked to show
support of D~rt Storm by flying flags
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman today requested village
residents and busl~~esses to show
their support for Operation Desert Storm by displaying the
American .flag at their residences and l!uslnesses .

Hoffman stated that Middleport has always been a very
patriotic community and that
now was certainly the time to
visibly show support for our
country, our troops, and our
president In the ongoing efforts to
free the people of Kuwalte.

Martin Luther King's widow
praises Israel for restraint
j

'-

• ••

ATLANTA (UPI) - Coretta
Scott KIDI opened the annual
celebration .of Martin LUther
King .tJ'. Day by calling for· a
cease-fire In thi! Persian GuU
war a~ denounciDI the war as
"another misguided at tempt to
make the United States the
world's policeman."
The wlfe.of the late civil tights
leader also praised Israel for not
retaliating to Iraqi · missile
attacks.
Mrs. KIDI opened the celebration Sunday, the eve of Martin
Luther King Jr.' Day, with her
annual "State of the Dream'
addres's at Ebenezer Baptist
Church, where KIJii and . his
·
father served as pastors.
"It takes courage and Wisdom
to refuse to be aucked Into the .
cycle of retaliation, ·and I bbpe
and pray that Israel will be able
to continue to exercise restraint," Mrs. KIDI said.
Her addrels, which echoed her
late husband's 1963 "I Have a
Dream" speech, spoke of the
unfinished
war on poverty. and
.

•

racism and called for a cease-fire
In the Persian Gulf .
In a mov!DI ceremony that
opened With "The Star-Spangled
Banner," Mrs. King reaffirmed
her late husband's plea for a
world where ambassadors, not
missiles, . settle international
disputes.
•'Let us be clear that we are not
fighting for democracy for there·
Is no gen\Jine .democracy In tbe
Persian Gulf," Mrs. KIDI said.
"This war Is yet another .misguided attempt .to make the
United States . tM world's ·
.
policeman."
·
Speaking from ·her husba!ld 's
former pulpit to a capacity crowd
of more than 700, Mrs. KIDI
challenged a government she
said spends !!5 cents of every
taxpayer dollar on the military
and only two cents on education.
"We can be thankful that the
hosta11es are home from Kuwait
and Iraq, " she said. "But the
real hostages of u.S. militarism
are American achoochlldren, the
nation's 3 mUllon homeless peo-

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pie, the 20 million Americans
who experience hupger every ·
day."
,, During her speech, Mrs. Klpg
spoke of the peaks and valleys of
the ciVIl rights movement In the
past year: Nelson Mandela's
release and visit to Atlants;
President Bush's vetooitheCivll
Rights Act of 1990; the end of the
Cold War and the beglnntngofthe
Persian Gulf War.
"1 wish the president and the
U.S. Supreme Court would Jlllder-.
stand that American bas had
affirmative action programs for
white males for tWo.centu.l'les,"
she said. 11t Is only reasonable
that women and mlnorltll!ll r,e- ,
celve a fair share of the great
wealth that we have lielped
produce,'' .
The King Week fl!lltlvltles
colltlnue Monday with an ecumenical worship service at Elle- '
nezer Baptist Church, with
former Atlanta Mayor Andrew
Young as the keynote speaker,
and a parade up Peachtree
street.
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CERTIPICATE
OF
COMPLIANCE
PRESENTED • hal Pi estoa, rlpt, Adalt
METT Coordinator or tbe Oblo Departmeat of
Mental Retardation, praented a Certlftc:ate of
Complluce to tlte Melp CoutJ Board rA MeD·
tal Retardation and Developllllelltal DbabDitlel
on Friday at Carleton Scbopl. Prestoll stated
lhat · the certification usures that tbe Melp

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BOII'd rA MRIDD II Ill run eompUaace wltlt Ill
Uemi rA tbe Adalt METT (Malnaalnl.., Evalaa·
doll, 'l'raiDIIq and TecJmlcal Aalstuce) revh.
Tbe Melli Boml rA MRIDD II Ollt of·ODIJ tlve

coantles 111 Olllo 111 run compliance. Accep&amp;1
tbe ta dllcate 011 bebalf rA tbe Board Is 'l'odd

Kina.

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Commentary

Monday. JIIIK*Y 21, _1911
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Ba~ bolts plagUe ·Pentagon hardware

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

WASHINGTON - JudCIDi by
the numbers of counterfeit bolts
In the Pentaion's hardware
Inventory, the U.S. war ms.chlile
Is held together ·b yno bettertlian
chicken wire and duct tape.
An Internal Pentagon r~ort
reveals that cheap bolts made
from weak metals have· found
their way Into the mUitary
stockpUes In alarm!ng numbers.
Many of the back-up machine
screws used to fasten wing parta
on the Navy's Corsalr A:7 attack
jets are fakes - substandard
Imitations of what the Pentagon
thought It was buying. The same
weak screws are used In the
Army's Apache helicopters and
Tomahawk mlaslles.
'
Many ol the spare machine
bolts tor the M174 gun mount are
illso bogus, l!S are the bolts on the

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS
OF THE MEIGS·.MASON AREA
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. _,...., F""T""11011c:::lo.,. '
. . ISl mj9 ,..,..._, ......
'q:lv
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
. PubJiaher

.I

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gl!lleral Muarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aosls&amp;lllll Publlaher/Coalroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International , Inland Dally Press
Association and t he American Newspaper Publishers .Association. .
LETTERS OF OPINION are wercome." They should be lesslllan:ioo
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be slgaed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties,

at.

Backstairs.
the·White House

.

lack Anderson
...

Lampa Mark Ill helicopters and sources say that It will take
the studs on the Phantom F -4 another year to feel the full
•
jets.
enforcement effect of the new
recent
General
Accounting
ot:
We have been warning for · consumer protection law. Mean·
flee report determined that al·
years ,that foreign manufactur· while, d!str!l!utors are scram·
most two-thirds of the nation's
ers were passing ott weak bolts
bllngtodumpthelrbogusboltson
'.
nuclear power plants bought
as tht: real thing. .Congreu
the market,
fasteoers that dOn't meet safety .,
pUled a bill In Its last session to
"It's dump tllne," warned
standards. Bogua.faatenei'JI have
stop the traffic. But the Pentagon Tommy Grant of Grant Fasten·
also surtaced at the National
lsjustnowflgurlngouthowmany ers Inc. In Houston..Grant Ia the
,.
Aeronautics and Space Admln!s·
of those bolts It bought and used
leader of a pack ol honest bolt
tratlon, !be Energy Department
makers who forced the Issue onto
before the br8Sb realized It was
and other federal agencies.
being fieeced.
Congress's front burner with the
The revelations about the
help of Reps, John D!ngell. · The Pentagon's supply l)'ltem
Is so d!sorganf1;ed that It hal been
•
spread ofbQgus bolts through the
D·Mlch., James DUbray, D-Nev.
.
·'
known
to
throw
out
bad
bolts
and
military appear In a Defense
and Helen Bentley, R·Md. Many
••
U;S. manufacturers were run out . then buy them back again. Last
Department Inspector generill
year a Cillltornla firm was
report obtained by our a.ssoclate
of business by the cheaper
convicted
of falsifying tests and
Jim Lynch.
foreign fasteners before buyers
·
se!Ung
bad
bolts to the goyern.
In the past three years, about
In America caught on to why the
rilent. The. company )lad picked
100 firms !J.ave been prosecuted
foreign products were cheaper.
up many of the bol~ at ~llltary
The counterfeit ' glut affects
for selling bogus fasteners and
for falsifYing tests. But Industry . · more than just the m!!ltary. A surplus auctions. ·
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By BELEN THOMAS
UPl While Roue Reporter
WASHINGTON- Barbara Busb won't go sledding again soon with
her grandchildren.
The first lady suffered a minor fracture of a bone In her left leg
when she.went sledding down an Icy hill at Camp David and rammed
Into a t~e.
·
She says that halfway down the hill she realized she had made a
mistake In taking up the sport and was •'too traumatized' • when the
president shouted for her to ball out.
·
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Mrs. Bush Is taking the setback In strlde,liowever, anclls In "gOod
spirits," although she had to remain ott ot tier teet tor three days,
using a wheelchair before clianglng to crutches. · ·
.. Mrs. Bush has had to cancel some of her public appearances during
the healing period but she Is keeping up with her paperwork.

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The first lady has d'ecllned to comment on the question of war and
peace In the Persian Gulf. Insiders say she Is happy that she Ia not the
president and did not have to make the fateful decisions.
Both the President and Mrs. Bush have strong memories of World
War II lind the president's hair-raising experience as a combat pilot
In the Pacific when he was shot down by the Japanese. He balled out
and was rescued later In his. yellow rubbei' d!ngby. ·

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· During the trying days of when !le had to deckle on whether to go to
.. war or walt outlraq's Saddam Hussein, the president has delVed Into

the history books, especially the pre-World War li days when the
country was deeply divided between th~ Interventionists and the
Jsolatlonlsts. The lsolatlonlsla were In the majorltyuntlltheJapanese
bombed Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941. Then ali the argtiments went
out the window and Franklin D. Roosevelt had a solid majority and a
unified country In the four-year battles ahead against the Axis
powers, Germany, Japan and Italy.

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As the White House appeared to go more and more on a war fooUng,
the mood was somber, a calm before the storm. The president cleared
the decks of routine public ap.p earances, and basically kept a low .
protlle.
·
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In the Image making department, White House press secretary
Marlin Fitzwater set to work to draw tot reporters a plct~ or a
president who was calm, confident, steeled for the tough decisions
ahead, ready for anything and convinced or the correctness of his
course, come what may.
.
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Fitzwater does not usually Indulge In mood descrl'ptions, but In the
case of the Persian Gulf, he clea,rly wanted to assure country that the
command was In good steady hands.
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Fitzwater also promised the media not to lie In case of war.
"We have no Intention of ever lying on anything," he told reporters.
"We w!ll not use dls!nformation."
At the same time, he said, "Rather, my course Is not to say," when
asked questions that could verge on national security or that would
endanger the allied forces.
In the Reagan era, Pentagon· press spokesman Arthur Sylvester
caused a journalistic uproar when he declared that the
administration had the right to lie In cases llf national security.
The Issue has been debated through the :Years, "Qut the·consensus
appears to be that a "no comment" is better for official spokesman
keen on maintaining their cred!bUity.
And once they have lost their credibility by dishing out false
Information. they will have a bard time re-establlahlng their right to
be believed.

.Berry's World

•
"Guess what? The ongoing decline in output and employment for at least
twcrconsecutive quarters is at the door." ·
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Why the _polls.are often misleading
.

:·no

but opposed dragging the war out
to Interminable lengths whlie our
leaders tried to think of some
way to win It without Invading the
North or obliterating It with
bombs. These people, too, tho·
roughly disapproved of "the way
the president was handling the
war," but there was not a dove
among them.
'
To quote The New Yorker: "In
a recent Wall Street JournaVNBC News poD, tlfty·one
percent of 'those surveyed said
the country was headed In ·the
wrong direction, yet fifty-seven
percent approved of George
Bush'•· performance as pres!·
dent." This struck The New
Yorker as an "odd combination
of findings."
Once again, the. pollater had
not gone on to ask the obvious
next. question: "In what respect
do you ·think we are headed In the
wrong direction?" If be had, he
would probably have clarified

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Itis common knowledge that a
the "No/' and .disinclined to
pollster can get just about any paint the lily. We were left 'to
answer he wants by designing his assume, and It necessary were
questions carefully.
told, that a majority of Amerl·
During the later stages of the cans opposed our whole enter·
VIetnam War, It was common tor
prise In VIetnam.
pollsters to ask a representative
'
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cross-section ot the public,
And yet,' as other probed of
·you approve of the way the
public opinions made abundantly
president Is handling the war?"
cleaF, there was never. from one
Gradually the percentage of end or the VIetnam· war. to the .
those · replying "No" Inched upother, a majority of the Amer!·
ward_, until at last It was possible can people In favor of the sort of
tor the media to proclaim, with bugout the ll!tt demanded and,
· technical accuracy, that "a rna·
with the help of .the ~mocratic
jor!ty of tile American people · Congreu, ·ultimately achieved.
oppose the way the president Is Holders of that view, whounden!·
handling the war" - or, more ably "disapprove!! of the way the
briefly and far less accurately,
president was band!lng the war,"
"a majority of the American
had to be conJoined with another,
people oppose the war. "
veno different current of opinion
I cannot recall a single In· before majority status was
stance In which the pollster,
acquired.
confronted with a . "No;" ever
Thla second current of opinion
went on to ask the obvious next
c~nslste&lt;l o.t that subsi~
question: "In what way do you . group
of people who ha
think be Ia mlahand!lng It?" The objection whatever to Am
a's
media were qutte content with
m.!lltary presence In VIetnam,

William Rusher
"

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much ,t hat battles The New
Yorker's editors.
Most peopl~ewhen asked such.
a broad, co lusory queatlon,
tend.to stanCi ack from the preA
of ord!n11ry political !Jsues and
.
answer It on the level it ieems to
Invite: the level of thoujlbttul
speculation on long-term trends.
"Js America headed In tbe
wrong direction?" One thinks ~
· or at any .rate many do - of the . '
loss of ~llglous faith, the decline
' .
In the "family villues," the rile In . .' '·.
drug use. the Increase In violent
crimes, the upsurge · In exotic
"lifestyles" ... and answers,
.'
almost automatically, "Yes.''
But does this Imply, or ought It
logically to Imply, dissatisfac'.
tion WVh George Bush?
Of course not - · 111 fact,
probably the contrary. Let !lber·
als look elsewhere tor their
consolations.
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Wha-t do children know about God?

:George Plagenz ·

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"Say, didn't you use to
banker?"

be my friendly

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;Today in history
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B7 United l'rMa latei'IIMIDaal
· Today Is Mooday, Jan. 21, the 21st day of 1991 with 344 to follow .
The moon II waxing, moving toward Ita flrat quar ll!r.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
There are no evening stars.
Those born on th!J date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
soldier and Vermont folk hero Etban Allen In 1738; explorer and
historian John Fremont In 1813; . Confederate Gen. Thomas
. "Stonewall" JQckson In 1824; firearms designer john Browli!ng In
1855; Roger Nash Baldwin, founder of the Amertcu Civil
Llbettles
...

The parents were having trou·
School said,- "I should.. be more · patience of Joti, the stren~h of
ble getting their two cblldren to
Impressed by some persons I Samson - because they haven't
go !&lt;&gt; Sunday· school. Nothing
!mow, who say they wouldn't tbe slight~! Idea what you are In 'a strong, demanC!Ing, unyteld·
worked. So they decided to play
· lng·Allah.
think of Influencing their child, tillklng about." . ·
their trump card.
·
COoke told about a 16-year-old
ren In religious matters, If they
A reviewer of Coles' book
"Listen," they told their child·
carried over thMr.: hands-off high scboo) student who was writes In the New York Times ·
ren, "we're going to leave It up to· policy Into other areas of Ute."
taking a simple cultural literacy . Book Review: "We are lm·
you. You can take your choice Sperry obllervl!d the lnconsla· · test. Asked to Identify Cain and pressed by the sense of grandeur
~l~r you go to Sunday school or · tencles In these parents who are
Abel, he said they were "senior and certainty that the conltant
you give up TV tor a year."
· "rightly anxious about the partners In a law firm. ~
presence of the Implacable Dl·
Tbe brother and aliter cau·
friends their children have, the
But If our chUdren are Bible vine gives to lite." ~ .
cuaed and then gave their par·
college they are . going to, the lllllterates, many of them grow
Many of the answers Coles
ents their a•wer: They would
lite's work they pursue' and the up el[~mely !nqulst!ve about received · from hla lntervtewli
give up televtJIOn. (It was fln
mates they marry."
who God Is. Rollert Coles, a child . wltb cblldren.were both touclllnl
answer 't hat dluppolnted the
psychiatrist and Harvard profes· and surprlalngly profound.
pareata but It was not without Its
Today few parents would say
sor, relates hla conversations
One little girl "not yet 10, from
good aide. The children '1 school·
they are not Interested In their
with children In his new book· a region of the country not rarly
work Improved considerably.) '
children's religious upbrtng!ng.
"The Spiritual Ute of ChUdren." called backward," told Coles:
It was · fuhlonable In certain Many send their chUdren to
Coles did not meet. these
"When yo11're put liere, It's tor
c'hlldren In hla otttce (he has his a reason. The Lord wants you to
Circles a generation or two ago
S!ll1day school, but watch them.
tor parents to take 110 Interest In grow up, nevertheless, as Bible doubts about the "helping profes· do something. It you doit't know
' slons,'' especially his own field of . what, then you've 110t to try bard
their chUdren's religious devel·
Illiterates.
ps;ycblatry) but In Sunday to ·find out what. It may take
opment. They wanted them to be .
AIIBtalr Cpoke, the&lt;&gt; British
iehooiJ.
!Ji an art history class he time. You may make mlltakel.
entirely tree to make their own . Journalist who lived In America,
choices when they grew up. ·
. once wrote, "I find that ID talking · teaches In a grammer school, In . But If you pray, He'll lead you to
hospltills and In homes.
In h!J book "What You Owe
with young people In America, It
your direction. He won't hand
HIJ method was to ask them you a piece of J)aper with a map
Your Child" Dean Willard
1&amp;, better to skirt over the most
·
Sperry of Harvard Divinity
~omely Biblical .r eference - the . questions and_tape-record their on lt. No sir.
replies.
.
"He'll wlllsper sometll!ng and
In contrast to the replies of first you may not even hear. But
Union, In 1884: fashion designer Christian Plor In 1905; actor Telly
Chrtlltlan
and Jewllh children, It you trust In Him and keep
· Savalasln 1924 (age 67); comedian Benny Hill In 1925 (age 66); golfer,
many
of
whom
see God as a turning to Him, It wUI be all
Jack Nicklaus In 1940 (age 51); opera star Placido Domingo In 1941
loving.
father,
Coles'
converaa· right."
(aJe !ill); singer Mac DaviB lnt942 (age 49), and actor Robby Benson
lions
with
Muslim
children
he
It would be.hard to lm~e on
In 1955 (age 36). ·
;,
· ·
met
In
London
revealed.
a
belief
such
a picture of·God.
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B7 WILU.UI D. MURRAY
Bills crusbed the Los Angeles
UPI Sports Wrtter
Raiders 51·3 Sunday for the AFC
SAN FRAJ:!CilK;O ( UPI) crown.
The New York Giants earned a
Tbe Giants will go to their
Super Bowl trip with a backup second Super Bowl and flrstslnce
quarterback Sunday, hecauae wtlllllng the NFL championship
their defen~ stymied Joe Mon· after the 1986 aeason.
'
tana and dented the San Fran·
New York also aveoged a 7-3
cisco 49ers a chance to "three- • losut Candlestick Park Dec. 31n
peat" for the N:FL title.
a Monday night game.
The Giants scored a 15-13
"1'be first time we played we
victory on Matt Bahr's fifth field felt we left something here," said
goal, a ~-yarder with no time Giants ' defensive end Leonard
remaining In the NFC title game. Marshall, who had two sacks and
Bahr's kick sends the Giants to knocked Montana out of the
Super Bowl XXV ·next Sunday game. "Everyone said we
against the AFC champion But· couldn't win with a · backup
falo Bills In Tampa, Fla. The quarterback, so we came In here

By DICK USIAK
The B!lls' 51 points matched
ORCHARD PARK. N.Y. (UPI)
the 1963 San Diego Chargers for
-The Buffalo B!lls turned In the
most points In an AFC or AFL
strongest performance of any .: · championship .. game. The
team In AFC championship his·
Chargers beat the Boston Patrl·
ots 51-10 that yea!', In what 'had
tory Sund.ay. Next · week, they
been the most lopsided AFL·AFC
will .find out If they are good
enough to beat the best or tbe
title game until Sunday.
NFC.
Kelly ran the Bills' ·quick
offense
like a craftsman, using
Tile Bills, an original Amerl·
bOth· as a rusher and
Thomas
can Football League franchise
es ta bllshed In 1960, pummeled
receiver, and ftrlog passes to
wtde receivers James Lofton and
tbe Los Angeles Raiders 51·3 In
Andre Reed, who blew by gaspthe AFC title game to earn their
first trip to the Super Bowl.
Ing Raider defenders.
-In next Sunday's champion·
Lofton, a former Raider,
· ship game In Tampa, Fla., the
· Bills .will play the winner of the
NFC IItle game between the San
Francisco 49ers and New York
Giants.
"This game Is tor those fans
who have waited 31 years," Bills
linebacker Cornelius Bennett
said .
The B!lla shredded the Raiders' defense for 5l1l total yards,
Intercepted six passes and ran
their no-huddle· offense until
early ·In the fourth quarter. After
puU!ng quarterback Jim Kelly,
running back Thurman Thomas
and rnost of their starters, the
Bills began a celebration that has
. been over three decades In the
making.
Buffalo could ·well be the
strongest AFC represenative In
· the Super Bowl since tile Raiders
won the title In 1984. And the AFC
can use all the help It can get In
the Super Bowl, having lost the
last six title games.
"We're just not going to be
happy going there," B!lls All-Pro
defenslv.e end Bruce Smith said.
"We're going'· there for one
reason, and· one reason only, to
win the.,super Bowl."

Minford.beats Oak Hill 68-62
Minford's Falcons survived
their 10-po!nt fourth-quarter
lead's meltdown to one In the last
two minutes of Saturday night's
non-league game against visiting
Oak Hill with an 8-for-8 effort at
the foul line to outlast the Oaks by
a 68-62 count.
The Falcons, who never
trailed, expanded their lead !toni
two going Into the second quarter
to five at halftime to six by the
end of the third quarter, but with
the game's two top scorers Oak Hill cagers B!ll Potter (20
points) and Benjl Lewis (18) chipping .away at their lead In
prime time, they needed doubledigit efforts from Colln Thacker
(team-high 17 points), Tim Wes·
sell (12) and Eric Pinson (11) and
their foul shooting to preserve
tbe victory.
Oak Hill, 4-10; will host MeDer·
mott Northwest on Tuesday
before returning to SV.t.C action
on Friday night aga!rlst Kyger
Creek at Cheshire.
Score by quarters
Oak Hlll .... ....... ... 4 11 19 ~--62
Minford .. ......... .. 6 14 20 28-68

I

MINFORD (18) - Thacker
6.0·5·17: Wessell1·2·4·12; Pinson
4-0·3-11; Landdon 0-1-&amp;-9; Martin
3-0.2-8; Johnson 1·0-3-5; Correll
1·0·0·2; Shoemaker 1·0·0-2;
Miller 1-0.0.2. TOTAUI-18-3-2362
Field goals~ 21-44 (47.7%)
Free throws- 23·2a (82.1%)
Rebounds - 21
Turnovers - 15
OAK HILL '(62)
Potter
5·2·4-20; LeWis 4-2·4-18; C. Smlp·
son 4.0.2·10; Hall 3.0·0·6: Green
2·0-0-4; M. Simpson 2·0·0·4: TO.
TAU- 20+1U2
.
Field loal&amp; - 24-48 (50%)
Free throws - 10.14 (71.4%)
Reboundll - 23 (C . 'Simpson 9)
Turnovers - 17

SVAC standings
(Overall)
TEAM •
W L PF l'A
Hannsti Trace ... 11 3 1031 772
Southern ... :.. .. .... 11 3 1035 869
Eastern .............. 8 5 ,878 919
Symmes Valley .. 8 6 848 845
North Gallla ., ... : 6 8 . 1143 1143
Oak Hill ......... ... 4 10 913 1012
Kyger Creek ...... 2 12 835 1041
Southwestern ..... 1 11 683 875 .

. (vBPsU... )·

(Confereoce)
A DIYIIIM or Multimedia,. lac.
Hannan Trace ..... 9 1 788 533
I
Southern .............. 9 1 783 629
Publ!shed every attern0011, Monday .
Eastern ............... 6 4 702 727
throufh Friday. 111 Court St.. PomeroY, Oblo, by the Ohio Valley Pub- ,
Symmes Valley ... 6 4 590 586
llshlng Company/Multlinedla, Jnc .•
Pomeroy, Ohio 1!17611, Ph. 992·2158. Se· . · North Gallla ........ 6 4 830 736
cond clall poetag,e paid at Pomeroy,
Oak Hill . .. .. . ... .. ... 3 7 625 726
Ohio.
Kyger Creek ........ 1 9 583 762
SOuthwestern .... :...0 10 535 737
Memb6: United Prets lnternatltmal,
Inland DaUy Preaa AuoclaUon and the ' TOTALS ............ 40 40 11436 11436
Ohio Newapaper A11oclatlon. National

AdvertlllnJ Representattve, Branham
Newspaper Sale., 133 Tlltrd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.
I
I

pqn'MASI'ER:
Sond ·111
-Court
chto
The- Dally Sentinel,
St.,
Pomeroy. ~ 1571i9.
•
8t!II8CIIIPRON RATES
&amp;7 c.vrter or - .. Bolle
One Week ..... ,.................. ...........suo
One Month ......... ........................16.10

• One Year ..................... .... :....... m.ao
SINGLE cOPY
..
I'IIICI:
pally ..... :,.:......... .. ., .... .. .... ... 25 Conta

Sublertben not dealrlqto pay tile Car·
tier R\llf temlt ln adVance direct to

TEAM

. W L PF PA

North Gallta ........ 8 2 597 427
Hannan Trace ..... 8 2 570 431
Southern ........ ... ... 7 3 558 445
Oak H!11 .. .. ..."...... . 6 4 ~ 511
~astern ......... ...... 5 5 4~o 520
Symmes Val ley ... 3 7 45'7 553
Southwestern ... ,... 2 8 360 503
Kyger Creek.... .... 1 9 393 546
TOTALS , ....... c... 36 36112.2 3122

toull. Credit will bo alvn carrlw aeh

Sahrrdll)''l final
Minford 68, Oak Hill 62

No IUbiCrlpllon• by maU permltted•ln
area• wheft hem~ t!arrler lerVIce II
avaUable.

Tul!llday'• garne
McDermott Northwest at Oak

ltlallll-=
1-ellolp

Friday's sla&amp;e
Hannan Trace at North Osllla
Southwestern at Southern
Symmes Valley at Eastern
Oak Hill at Kyger Creek
..
Sa&amp;arda)''a COJIIelt
Miller at Eastern
. . ·'
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.......

13 wee~&lt;a .. ................................ nu•

. '

(Reserves)
(SVAC ooly)

The Dally Sentinel 0111S, 6 or Umontb

26Weel&lt;a .. ........... ... .. ...... ..... ..... SS7.N
1!2 Weel&lt;a .. .... .......... ... ............... S7UI
OIIIINellelp C1a1J

13 wee~&lt;a ... ,.............................. no.tlo
21W...................................... ,UCJ.30

52Weel&lt;a ................... ...... .......... S7UO
1

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with something to prove.''
The Giants failed to score a
touchdown, but controUed the ·
ball for 38: 59. They came up with
two big fourth-quarter plays- a
30-yard Gary Reasons run on a
fake punt and Lawrence Taylor's
recovery of a Roger Craig
fumble to set up the winning kick.
Montana, who guided San
Francisco to the last two Super
Bowl titles and four during the
last decade. suffered a · broken
finger ·and bruised sterurn when
Marshall leveled blm with less
than 10 minutes left. He would not
have been able to play !rthe49ers
had won their third straight

Super Bowl trip.
"You have to give tile 49ers
great deal of credit," New York
Coach Bill Parceila said. ' 'They
have been on top for a· long time.
They are the franchlae we all
asplre to be.
"I don't think there Is much
difference between ~ teams.

•

•

claco head coach George Seifert · · quarter.
said.
With Steve Young at quarter;
The 49ers gave up ground all back, the 49ers offense began
afternoon, but stiffened Inside what looked to be a clock·kWing
the 35 and held New York to four
final drive. Craig tuml;lled on the
Ba.h r field goal midway though opening p!sy, but It was recothe fourth quarter. Bahr missed
vered by teammateBubbaParla.
a 37-yarder early In the final
(See GIANTS on Pa~:e 4)

a

~a~i:!':~~t~=~~.~ ·Rio Grande posts 84-65 win

' The49ersweredenledachance '
Freshman forward Stephanie four of 16 from the ·three-point
to become the first team to wtn ,G udort poured In an early career range) to the hosts' 39.1 percen.t
three straight Super Bowls a~r high of 15 points and 13 rebounds
(27-69, one ot three !rom the
finishing with the league's best to lead the University of Rio three). Defensively, tbe Redworecord of 14·2.
Grande women's basketball men's total o( 41 rebounds over
"There's no question this Is a
team toan84-65M!d·OhloConfer· OD's 35 helped matters.
loss that will linger." San Fran- ence victory over Ohio DominiOD was. led by Kar.l Rlebesell
•
with 15 points and eight rebounds
can Saturday In .Columbus.
· Gudort, of St. Marys, Ohio, was and Lisa Janusz with 14 points .
backed .. by a 14-polnt j,ertor· OD committed 31 turnovers to
mance from Kathy Snyder, the Rio Grande' s .28. and the t.ady
5-10 junior forward from Ga· Panthers shot 80 percent (16-20)
hanna. Snyder had 10 points In from : the lou! line. The Redwo·
The six Interceptions set an AFC
the first half, which saw Rio men were nearly equal from the
championship game record.
· The Bills gained 55 yards on . Grande and the Lady Panthers Une, netting 16 or 21 attempts tor
.76 percent.
.
battle to a tie at 37.
tbe!r first five plays, putting the
.. _.. .The
Redwomen
re-enter
con"We
played
very
~well
In
the
ball on .the Los Angeles 20: The ·
second ball," Redwomen hea!l ference action at home Tuesday
obviously weary Raiders called
timeout to catch their breath.
coach Doug Foote noted as his at 5: 15 p.m . against defending · .
· · ' :.
.•'The way they were going team Improved to 11·8 and 2·2 In MOC champion Urbana.
OHIO
DOMINICAN
(85)
•·
today, I don't know of anything the conference. Kerii Kidwell,
Karl
Rlebesell
4-1-4-15;
Jackie
we could have done to stop the Redwomen's starting forReynolds 1.0.0-2: Lissa Latina
. them ," Ra!d.e rs head coach Art ward from Hamersville, Ohio,
2-0.(}-4;
Lisa Janusz 4-6--14; Ml·
Shell said.
. also hit 14 points and brought
chelle Simms 2.0·3· 7; Elaine ClaY
The Bills led 14-3 .before the down 11 rebounds.
· The Redwomen came Into the 5-3-13; Mary Tressler 5,0.0-10.
game was seven minuteS old, and
TOTALS 24-1-lHII
led 41· 3 by halftime. The only game fresh from Thursday's
RIO GRANDE (84) - Jenn!
100-67
pounding
of
Malone
at
(Continued on Page 3)
home, the second largest margin Couch 2-0-1·5; Gena Norris 2·2·1·
of victory pilsted this season 11; Michelle Crouse, 2-0.0-4;
since the team's 66-50 victorY · Debbie Fredrick 5·1.0·13; Kerr!
Kidwell 6·0·2·14; Ann Barnltz
over Kenyon In the Bevo Francis
2-0-4-8; Stepban!e Gudort 2-1·8Classic.
Improved shooting play~d an
15; Kathy Snyder 7·0·0.14 . TO.
Important part In Rio Grande's
TALS 28-4-111-84
succe/IS. against OD. Rio Grande
Haltlbne acore - Rio Grande
was 46.4 percent (32-69; Including
37; Ohio Dominican 37

Buffalo hammers LA.
Raiders '"51-3.
.

.The Daily Sentin·e l

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.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Ponwoy-Middleport. Ohio

N.Y. ·Giants upset San Francisco 15-13. bi NFC title game

•

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The Daily Sentin~]

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Monday. Janu.y 21. 1991

Pomerov-Midcleport, Ohio

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Page 2-The Daily Sl!lltnel

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HID

caught two touchdown passes,
Thomas rushed for 138 yards and
a TD on 25 carrtes and Kenneth
Davis scored three rushing TDs
to tie ·the AFC title game record
set Ml.a ml's Larry 'Csonka In
1973.
. ''I don't think we expected this
one to come out as easy as It did,"
said Kelly, who completed 17 of
20 passes for 300 yards.
Linebacker Darryl · Talley. a
former college standout at West
VIrginia, Intercepted tWOJla.s ses,
returning one 27 yards for a
first-quarter TD and 21·3 lead.

'

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Cedarville records 89-86 win
over Rio Grande Saturday
Troy Donaldson, the Un!ver· · TOTAU Si-&amp;-9-89
· RIO GRANDE (86) ~ Gary
slty of Rio Grande's 6:7 center
Harrison 3·2·10·22; Mark Erslan
from Sebring, Ohio, exploded,for
2-2·2·12; Brad Schubert 2·2-0-10;
25 points and 12 rebounds SaturLester Smith 1·0·0·2; Darius
day against Cedarville, but the
Williams 3'0-1-7; Jeff Brown
Yellow Jackets outlasted a deter·
2-1·1-8; Troy Donaldson 8.0-9-25.
mined Redmen assault long
TOTAUI 21·7-za.sa
.enough to post an 89-86 Mld·Oh!o
Halftbne score - Cedarville
Conference victory.
46,
Rio Grande 45
Cedarville, which started last
week In the top spot In Dis trtct 22
'
. Redmen dump Wllbertoroe
and the MOC. went to 15-4 on the
The Redmen were back on the
,season and 3·0 In the conference,
road
Sunday for their second
while the Redmen are 2-2 In MOC
meeting of the season with
action.
,
Wilberforce University and
Gary . Harrison. last week's
emerged with a 1~·79 win over
district and conference player of
the Runnln' Bulldogs.
the week, added 22 points In a
Despite the letdown from Satypically Intense game at Clidilr·
turday's loss to Cedarville, the
ville's Athletic Center. The Red·
. men trailed by one at the half and .Rio men jumped out quickly and
poured on the effor-t In the second established a 41·29 lead at half·
half, but Dr. Don Callan's team time. 'Four Rio players placed In
prevailed through double-!!gure double . figures, led by Brad
Schubert with 19 points. Mark
scorll\g from f.lve of his athletes,
led by Ken Rucker with 19 Erslan had 15, Gary Harrison 14
and Jeff Brown 11. Brown also
markers and 13 rebounds.
The Redmen suffered 23 tur· posted nine rebounds and Troy
novers while Cedarville held Its Donsldson supp!!ed seven.
Now 16-4, the Redmen host
losses to 14, but as Is usually the
Ohio
Dominican Tuesday at 7:30
case In a tight game with Rio
p.m.
Grande, Jobn Lawhorn's club
battled to near equality on
reboundll!g: the Yellow Jackets
SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA
were credited .with 46 boar"s to
446 4524
.
.the Redmen's 45.
· The Redmen shot 41.2 percent
from the field on 28 or 66
attempts, Including seven of 17
from the three-point range.
From the foul line, they were 61.1
percent (23-36) . Cedarville countered with 41.4 percent (37 "90, six
of 16 from the three) on shooting
and notched 56.8 percent (9-16) ·
from the line.
CEDARVILLE (89) - Todd
Pennington 3·3-0.15; Ken Rucker
7.(1.5-19; Jaden Callahan 0·3·2·11:
Ron Pierce 8.0·0·16; Tracy Str!n·
ger 5·0·2-12; David Barnes, 1·0·0·
2· Dominic McKinley 7.0·0·14 .

BOBBLES PASS -Buffalo wide receiver Sieve Tasker (left)
rea.chea out for this Jim Kelly p88s, hut bobbles It u L.A. Raldel'l
llaebacker Jerry Robinson (57). moves In to defend oo tbe play
during Sunday's AFC cbarnplonshlp game In Butfalot which lbe
Bills won 111·3 to earn the rl1ht to face the N.Y. Giants In next
Sundll)''s Super Bowl. ( Ul'l)

Portland downs Milwaukee
116-112 in lone NBA game
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) · The Milwaukee Bucks are !ookliig for a little respect.
The Bucks, one of the NBA's
surprise teams this season,
dropped a 116·112 decision to the
Portland Trail Blazers Sunday
night In the NBA's only scheduled game but they did gain the
respect of Portland head coach
Rick Adelman.
"Give Milwaukee credit. They
never quit," Adelman said. •'The
Bucks are a team with a lot of
character . .. They seldom beat
themselves.''
The Bucks· were without the
. services or two or their top
players. Top scorer Ricky Pierce
was home with his wife who·just
gave birth and Frank Br!ckowsk!
was out with a sore knee. Still,
Milwaukee battled back from an
early 21-po!nt deficit.
•'We just don't seem to get any
respect even though we:ve won
more games SJ!an any team In the
league except this one (Por·
!land) and Boston," said Mllwau·
kee head coach DeJ ·Harris.
The Blazers were also shorthanded with · Buck W!l!lams
nursing a pulled groin muscle.
However, Portland hardly
needed him In tile first half as the
Blazers raced to their biggest
lead at 41-20.
But Milwaukee turned the
game around rn the second halt
and ;~ctually had a 10-po!nt lead
early In the fourth quarter before
the Blazers ra!Ued for the ·
victory.
Kevin Duckworth scored 21
points and Terry Porter added
nine In the tina! three mlnuteus ·
the Blazers averted what easily
could have been their third.
homecourt loss of the season. ·
The Blazers hav.e the best
recol-d In the league at 34-7 while
Milwaukee dropped to 27-13.
After trailing almost tbe entire
fouth quarter, Duckworth hit a
pai-r of free throws with 2: 07 left
to. give .the Blazers the lea~ for
good at 10!&gt;-104.
.
·
But the key player for Portland
down the .stretch was.Porter. He
calmed a three-pointer with 3:10
left to put the Blazers ahead
103-102. With 43 seconds left he hit
a layup to push· Por~and' s

I

advantage to 110·105. He added
four free throws In the last ·30
seconds to secure the victory for
the Blazers.
"We -had a lot of gu~s who did
well down the stretcnand that's
the sign of a good ·team, when
different ones contribute every
night," Porter said.
The Bucks made It close at the
end when Jay Humphries drilled
a 20-foot jumper and Brad
Lohaus stole Portland's ensuing
!llbounds pass and went In for a
dunk to cut the deficit tQ 112·110
with six seconds left.
But Milwaukee was forced to
foul and Porter canned two free
throws to Ice the game.
"We didn't execute as well as
tbey did down the stretch," said
Milwaukee center Jack S!kma.

' ..,

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•

Rates of Taxation for 1990
In I'U' ""~ "Ill u l L.Jw , 1,

c;,,,, ljl! M

1
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d o I'Wf lilly U•V'! nnlll.:tl , 1 t h~ Act ti!S n l Ti! l &lt;ll• on lor thl! Till '{ mtr n t 1!)9 0 Alil t!'!' t: llll)l'l'lS$4.'11 1n U1J itars :..n&lt;J C t:m~ on eac h ooo thn u so ntl onn,11 ~

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filii E1t1tt tiiiH wnid't n.,. not '-" Pltd 11 d11 c:losi ot •h collection c.rv • PfN!t~ of left ~cant Tawl'l may bl potld ll fl'4 office
o! thl CCMJtlty truwrlr Of by mtll . PINM bring your l"t tiK IKtlpt ; and it VOU PIIV by mtil , bt \utt tO IOCIII your property by t8Jtlng
dinrict •nd tndate ttttnDtCI wlf..ciOrflMd tn¥tloPt .
.
A!w.,., ••.m'lnt yeaH tall r.c:.lpt to 11t ttlll it CO'IIU Ill v~r _,OPtrtv . ~flct Houu 8:30A.M. ta 4:30P.M., MonOty l'tiN FfiOIY -

CloHCI on ~turdly ,

•

GEORGE M.,COLLIHS, Mtifl CoYn~ TrtHUrtr

,\

'I

'·

�..

.. .

-· -·· . .

-~

Plga

~ ~ The

Ponwoy-~kklapol1. Ohio
.
.

Dally Sentinel

Mondr(, JerK*Y 21. 1891
~

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No• .7 UCLA doWD8 UC-~rkley 98-81
LehJab 115, Collate 84 .
Malao 64, Hart!on! 63
Manhattan 66, canllfus•5
Merrlnnacll90, Bentley 83
Meollah !M, Elizabethtown 58
MoUoy 66. Klnp Point 64 tOT)
Mcmmwth 90, LIU·Br«*lyn.65
Moravian 76, Dlcldn1011 58
Mt. St. M&lt;ory's 76. Mar lsi 71
Naumh 73, BrcckP«&lt; St. 70
NIBiara 81. FahfiEid 79
Northatstern 84, NorthweaErn 79
Norwich 65, Cout Guan160
Oneonta St. 68, Potadam 65
.
Phlla. Pharmacy
69, Mllerlconlla
.

This week's Ohio
college c:age slate
THIP&lt;

Ohio State- at Indiana
Clew land State at Eulern Dlbtm.s
Dettancp at Malone
Shawnee State at Dyke

'l'loNdaJ

Cedarville at Wahl\
Flridlay at Urbana

Tttttn at Mt Vernon Nazarene
Ohio DomlrUcan at Rio Grande

.,

.,.... ..,

Ball State at Ohio l!ntveraty
Toledo at Bawl/ni Gref!l

'I
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Phlla. Textile 95, &lt;,WIImlngton 53
Plattabul'i 57, New Paltz 55
Prootd...,e 108, CoMectlcut 102
R. · laland 84. St. Bonaventure 82

Kent State at Central Mlc:tttaan ·
Miami at Western MldliiJllll
Akrm at Youngstown State

(QT)

Texas Southern at Wrt~rht State
Musklngum at Ohio Northem

Ride&lt; 82, Md.-Boltlmore County 61
Robert Morris 87, St. Fronds (Pa)
85
Rutaen 75. W. Vlfllnla 71
S. Malne 77, SE Maua chuoetts 71

Mount URton at Marietta

Hiram at Ouerbeln
Capital at Heidelberg
Baldwtn·Wallaceat John Carroll
Den loon at Earlham (lnd)

(&lt;Yr)

Kenyon at"Ohlo Wesleyan

Scanlon 84. Wilkes 63
St. Francis (N.Y.) 87, Wiper 71
St. John'• 73, Ptttsbu'ih 71
St. Peter' s 79, Siena 58
Staten Island 106, John Jay 101
Susquehanna 58, Dlcklnloo 36
Syracu"' 78, Setm Hal164
Towson St. 1•, Hofstra 61
Trentm St, 73, Montclalr St. 55
Tulane 70, HofStra S8 Valley Fo'ie
74,
PraCtical Bible 63 .
Wesleyan 95, Trinity 88
West Cheoter 65, MansfiEld 63
Westbrook 91, Maine M&lt;lrtume 66
Westfield St. 78, Fltchbol'l St .. 52 •
Wheellll[ Jesuit 88, Alde&lt;SDI!r"'d·
dus86
Wllllams 63, Amherst 58
Worcester St. 85, N. Adams St. 83
• Yale 52, Brown31
York 73. SaiiJbu.:y St 69
Soulb
Alabama 67. Geo!llla 62
Alabama A&amp;M 90, Miles 83
Auburn 67, Tenneswee 63
llupsta 93; CliarleotM Southern 80
~ntenary 77, Ark.·UtUe Rock 75
Concord 99, Chariest~ 17
Coppin St . 78, Florida A&amp;M 64
Duke 7t N. Carolina 60
E . Kentucky 83. Mtd, Tenn. St. 73
E . TennesoeeSt. 93, W. Carolina 76
Falnnoot St . 100. Shepbenl 76
Florida 85, Mlsotulppl St. 82
Florida St. 81, S ..Cardltna 60 (&lt;Yr)
Funnan 78, The Citadel 57
Ga . SOuthern 71, Mercer 6&amp; ·
Geol'le Muoo 93, Navy 82
GeOflla Tecl! 78, Yl!lllnll 51
JadiiCJI St. 118, Grambllllc 91

Oberlin at Allegilely (Pa)

Wooster at Case Reserve
Rio Grande at Dyke

.

Wilberforce at WllmingtCJJ
BlulftCJJ at Deflanco
.
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Thwnd&amp;J

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Ohio State at

Mlnnes~a

Cincinnati at Tulilne
Dayton at Sutler
Xavier at Detroit
Lake Erie at MaJooe
Ohio Dominican at Findlay
Frld&amp;J
No games scha:tu~

.I

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Sol...,

•

Ohio University at Miami

..•

BowUna Green at Kent State
Eas~rn Michigan at Toledo
Ctnclnnatt at Southern Miu
Wlscon.stD-GB at Akrm

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North em llllnots at Cleveland St
Dayton at Detroit
Southern Utah St at Wrtcht St
Xavle&lt; at South Florida
Heidelberg at Mount Union
Hiram at Ohio Northern
Marietta at Baldwin-Wallace
C&amp;pttal at Mtisltingum
Otterbein at John Carroll
•
Allegheny ,tPa.) at Wltlenberg
Case Re:Erve at Earlham (Ind. )

•
•

•

Kenyon at Wooater

-.

Oberlin at DeniaCJl

Ohio Wesleyan at f'lndlay
Ind-Pur-Fl Wayne at Alhland
Mldtl&amp;an-Dearbom at Central St
Lake Erie at Slippery Rock (Pa. )
Deftaace at Th&lt;mu Mo.., (Ky.)
Ohio Wesleyan at 11ndlay

••
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Shawnee state at WUmlngtCD

Wilberforce at Llndwey Wt11011
.DykeatMaicne
Blulfttll at Ohio Dominica n

James Mad1101l67, American 65
Kentucky 58, Vanderbilt !SO
Uberty 70, Eut Mennmlte 63

Mt Vernm Nazarene at Cedarville

,.'

Louisiana St. 87, Mlslllulppl71
Loulalana Tedll/0, C. Florida 63
Louisville 85, South Alabama 83
Maphall77, Va. Military 71
Maryland 87, s. Florida 81
Aupstana (DI. ) 99, C&amp;rtllage73
Baldwln·Wallace89. RloGrande86
B.lll St 60, w. Mlcllipn 76 (Q'l') ..
85, St. John's (Minn.) 80
Bl,lndlana St. 70
Detroit 56
C. MlchiiJllll 73, Toledo :16
C. MIIIDUri 87, Mlf100ri·Rolla 64
Cedarville 89, Rio Grande 86
Central St. (Ohio) 117, Dyke 76
· Cincinnati 77, Vlrglnla T~ 61
Clewland St. 58. Dlln!U-Chlcago56
COncordia (Neb.) 92, Danna 63
Oaytm 84, EvansvUie 61
Doane 101, Midland Lotheran 85
E. n11no11 75, Akron 85
&gt;
E. MldliiJllll 73, I!Owl/ni Green 68
Eaatorn m. 75, Akrm 65
Elmhumt 67, Whmtcit Coll60
Evanrel 73, Baker 51
. Friends 87. Bethany 46
Hlrom 84, Marietta 70
m. Wooleyan 109, Carroll 81
Dlin!U St. 71. CreiJbtm 68
Indiana 99, Iowa 79
Iowa St. 94. Kansas St. 91
. Kan•s·91, Missouri 6C
Law"""'e 83, nlllloU Coll. 79 (QT)
Lewto 79, St. Joseph'a (Ind.) 78
Mankato St. 95, N. Colll'ado 63 ·
Marquette 82, Loyota em.) 36
Mldtlgan 69, WIICODiin 68 (Q'l')
Mld!lgwn St. 73, Mlnneslia 64
Mluourt Western 77, SE MJsKJUrt
71
Mo. South em 7~ NE Missouri St. 66
Momlll&amp;slde 79. N. Dakota 77

Walsh at Rio Grande
Ttffin.at Urbana

'
'

''

NHL schedule

'•

SUurday'1 1ame
41/IICI AIJ.SQr Cilome at Clllcaro
C&amp;mpbeltll, Wales 5

Sund.,.'IJ&amp;mN
No gamei IChEduled

'

;

Toatpt'11ame
Minnesota at WIMIIJOII', 8: 35p.m.

(

;

r

..._...,,,JamM

I

,
·'.,

CAlgary at Philadelphia. 7:35
p.m .
Basi"'! at Buffalp, 7: 35p.m.
WashiJiilm at Detroit, 7:35p.m . .

N.Y. Rana:euatN.Y. Islanders,
7: 35p.m .
New Jeroey at PIIIJbul'lh. 7:35

~

p.m.

1

Toronto at Quebec, 7:35p.m.
St. Louis at Mlnneaota, 8: 35p.m.

•

'
•,
I

Los Angeles at Edmmtcil, 9:35
p.m.
.
Wedaadar'•&amp;am•

I

Tormto at MQntreal, 7: 35 p.m.
Calgary at Hart!onl, 7: ~p.m .
Edmmtm at VallCOuver, 10:35

'

••
•

p.m.

..•
..
.

Monday sports

calendar

•

(AIItlmeiE8T)

NBA

•
'•
'•

M:t. Vernm Nazatent8l, Urbana 78.

Philadelphia at New York, 1 p.m .
Orlando at Washlnetm. ! ·p.m.
MJnnes~a

••
••
~

Ohio 60, Kent 59
· Ohio Northern 5t Mount Union 51 ·

at Deaver, 4 p.m.

Chicago at Miami, 7; 30 p.m.
Baston at Detroit. 7:30p.m.
L.A. Lakersatlndlana,7: 30p.m . .

...

••

(OT) ·

Ohio St. 89. Dlinoll 55
Parka 63, MacMurray 62
Ripon 98. Coe 82
Rocklon16S. .Judson' 51
SIU·Edwardavllle 70, Quincy 61
St. Cloud St. 73, Nebraaka~aha
70
St. Francis (DI.) 82, Olivet Naz. 66
St. Loull 58. Xavier (Obto) 56
St. Th&lt;mas "· Conconlla (Minn.)
61 .
SterBIIg 102, McPherWCJJ 99 (Q'l')
Tabor 79, Kanau Wesleyan 68
Taylor 85, Franklin 7!1 COT)
W. Illinois 83, Valparalao 69
Wallll 96, Lake Erie 69
Waohlll&amp;tm 83. Car~~e~le MeUm 63
Wichita,St. 68, S. Dlin!U 65
Wllmlngtill 94, Blul!tm 89 (Q'l')
Wls. -Green Bay 63, N. .DIInoia 57
Wls.·MIIwaukeeliJl, Chlca&amp;o St. 91
Wo-r 74\ Wlttonbef'l 68 ·
Wrllht St. 101, Mo.·Kanoas City 90

Houston at- Sacramento, 10:30

-..

p.m .

NJD.
Minnesota at Wlnnii&gt;OII. 8: 35p.m.

T-lo

·

Melbourne, AustralJa -Austral·

Ian Open

:

..••,..•
:

S'a turday's

prep cage results

11

r

Solulldar, loa. Jt

,; •.'

Alexander 53, Athens 51
Bryan 811, Sylvanll Norlhneld i!8
Findlay 88. Uma Sr. 75
Fredericktown 63, Lo1MionvUie 61

,..,
..1

.

Ohio

boys'

,~

.

QT

Gallpolll74. Waverly 62
S.ndullky 75, Bellevue 59
Trlway 89. Monroeville 55
· Wapakoneta 74, Coldwater

So-t
Arkanou 98, S. Methodlat 70
Baylor 90, Texu A&amp;M 85
E . Texas St. 60, W-. Texas St. 56
Hou•on 73, Texu Tedl70
Howwrd Payne 78, Aullil CoD. 59 .
Midwestern Texas 83, Lubbock
Cbr. 75
N. Teua 88, NWLouiotana 77 (&lt;Yr)
Oklahoma 76, Oklah&lt;ma St. 72
PhUUps9&amp; Okla. Baptllt 83
S.F. AUIIID67, SW Texas 65
Sam Houlton 61, McNeese St. 52
Texao 90, DePaul80
Texu·Ai'llllgtm 90, NE Louisiana
81
.
.
Texao·San AntCillo 106, Samtord 63
Texu ChriiUwn 78, Rico 68
Texu Southern 85, Southern 83
Tulia 90, Drake 66

56..

·Weekend coli¥

.•••.

.basketball·resulls

...•..

Eut
.
Ame&lt;lcan lnt'l82, Bryant 72
Albany 84. Corlland St. 74 •
Allegheny 92, Earlham :19
Ailna Marla 75, Roger Williams 61
ArizOna 72, Vlllan.oYa 6C '
Bard 70, Poly Tedl67
Batet 91, WheatCII 79
BlocmDeld 67, Poll 49
. Bo&amp;tm Unlv. 74. VerrnODt 66
Bucknoll86, Army 62
Bullalo St. 69, Oowo&amp;o St. 40
CCNY 8~ Lehman 76
Columbia 65, O&gt;moll!l!l
Conconlla 85, QueiiU 76
CoM. O&gt;llete 96, E. CoMectlcut 91
Dell ware 72, New Hampllllro 511
Drlawwre St. 117, N. Carolina MT
.A

-••
.~

"·-··

.·..
",..
·~

•..
...
•

..
'.
..
..".
.
,

bef'l62

.I

.

Goo. Waah. '/3. St. Jooopll'1 (Pa.)65

GeorletOWD 59. Bool&lt;ll Collete e

Glulboro
71 Wm. Pater101114 (QT)
GrOIII' City a, Wah • • Jef1. 63
Hartwick 75, BIJII(Iamtm 72 (00')
Hobert 91, RDbertl Weoloyan 77
Indiana (Pa, ) 71, Pltt·Jotuti!Oim73
!Dna &amp;1, Loyola (Md. ) 56
Ithaca 71, AI~ 61
John Hot*lna 8t. Havertonl 43
Juniata t9. DelaiO.,.., Valley 62
• LeMoyne 5L Pace 50·
·
.Leban&lt;ll Valley lt. Geltylburt53

.

-

.

'

.

. N""' Mexlco 84, Hawall77
Ocdd•tal 79, LaV..,. 78
Oream St. 70, Wullti!Cim 80
Padlk
San Joor St. 14
hppeldtrse JOi, LoyOJa Mary·

a.

'.

""-&lt;&lt;SI. N. Rocheolrr 87 !mJ

OSU beats Illinois

mCIIIIItt5

•

·,

Portlalld 67, G&lt;lt!Zala 63
Call!. Col. 84. Christ Coll. 72
San 011110 90, San Fraaolooo 68
San Dl,.o St. 58. Texu·El Puo55
Santa Barba10 83, Cal· Irvine 81
Soatlle&lt;n Col85, Stan lord 67
SL Mary's (Cai.)57,SantsCiara55
UCLA 98, Cal Komia 81
Utah 57, Air Fon:e 47
Utah St. 91, Frftno St. 69
W. OreaciDIJ:i, E. OregmlOI'
Wlahl"'lm !lt. 82, Oreaon 79
W•tmoot • Biola 37
Wlllttler 96, Cal Tocll 51
WyomJAc 86, Brl;ham Yo1111180

s.

Friendly Circle meets
Plans were made for the ttadi- ted. Holiday cards were IICnt 10
tional Lenten Breakfast. Ash Wed- members in the Armed Fon:es and
nesday morning, Feb. 13 at 7:45 10 non-resident membm.
The program opened with prayer
a.m. at Trinity Chlll'Ch · when
Friendly Circle met.Thesday even· by Oay Perrin, ~dc:lit. -IJ'wo
ing. 'lbe public is invi~ to attend gues15, Mildred Ward ilnd Glldrun
the &lt;breakfast ReservatiOns may be Schadtel and 17 members wn·
made by calling 992~3222 IX 992· . tributed 10 the program with
thoughiS in prose ill' poetry that
3771.
The Circle .w ill serve the were inspiring. challengiQg and
Bloodmobile canteen on Feb. 6 some times humorous.
A potluck supper was held
with Alice Globokar, general
before
the meeting with table BJ1CC
chairman.
The first weeldy Lenten Service by JoAnn Wildman. The deep conwill be held at 'llinity Church on cern all feel for the Mid-East silua·
lion was reflected in the evening
Feb. 14.
Reports of the siclc and officers pnayers. Several relatives of the
reports were made. Appreciation congregation are serviJig in the
.
from the elderly and shut·ins for area.
holiday remembrances was n:por-.
EASTERN LOCAL WINN!R • Billy FraaclB, Tuppen Plains, . .
·· - the first place willner Ill the Eastern Local ~bool District Ill a
recent poster contest spoasortd by the Meigs Couaty Litter Control
Program, "Doa't Let a Great State Go to Waste ••• Recyde."

Your Social .Security
THE DISABIUTY DECISION
'

By Ed Petenon .

MEIGS LOCAL WINNER • KreSba Crawle}', Har.risonviUe, is
the Melp Local Sthool District's 8rst plate WJIIIIer ill tbe Meigs
County .l.,ltter CoulrOI Protrram's poster conte.t; ne theme for the
contest was ''DQn't Let a G'reat State Go to Waste ..• Recycle." ·

SOUfHERN LOCAL WINNER • Jason Lawrence, Syracuse,

was the first place wiDner In the Sdutbem Local School Dlstrk:t In

the poster contest, "Don't Let a Great State Go to WilSie •••
Recycle," sponsored, by tbe Meigs CoDDty Litter Control Program.

"
...
:''

''

Cl.ASSFIED
ADS

·~

:.

'

·-

II"• •

. .:

.kP'I

........... l!oil

·-

--

1

..........

MEIGS COUNTY RESIDENTS
• ...... _

-

..

-W

I ............. '""""'. .

•

Wo1ld you likt te purchaH a SOxlOO ft. build·
lng lot in a good loca!lon for only SJSOO?
Would ytu •• to build a new home ancl pay
no rtal estate taxes for ,15 years?
Wtuhl yo1 llkt to hawt up to .SSOOO FlEE
for lite l•oYitlllnh on your llu~dlng loti

----If you do,· Contact Jean Trusiell, Housing
. Specialist,· for fu.rthtr information.
PIIOfll (614) 992·6712 r

,.rt Ylllll

217 ... Strltt, . ,••

Offlcts

·--

SKYLINE 28x52
SAVINGS .

UP TO . .. . •

$8 , 00000

Every home has been marked down to
make room for new spring stock. ·

BRAND NEW 14 WIDES ·
STARTING AT ......... , .

sg . 995
,

Located 5 Mlies East Of At. 33
On Rt. 50, Athens 592·1972
.......,...~-...;.,-~-_,;;...;.;;;;,..;,;.;,;:...J , , I

•

The Meigs CoUnty Liller Conttol
Program recenUy conducted·a poster · contest fa all sixth grade
studenll in Meigs County, with the
theme, "Don't Let a Great Suue Go
to Waste . ~ . ~ecycle."
First place winni!'¥ posters at
each school were LISa Stethenr,
Chester: Rick · Barringer, River·
view; Billy Francis,.Tuppers Plains,
first place .Eastern Local District;
Libby King and Brandi Meadows,
Bradbury; Kresha Crawley, Harrisonville. Meigs Local' first place
wirmer; Fl'llllklin Pien;e, Salem
Center: Robyn Hunt. Salisblll)':
Amy Rizu, Portland; Amy Northup, . Racine:· Jilson Lawrence,
Syracuse, Soutliem Loc:8l · first
place winner; and David VanInwagen. Rejoicing Life.
Liuer pre';emion !llld recycling
· activities are U~K~erway for 1991,
funded by a grant from the Ohio
Depanment of Natural Resources,
Division1of Liuer Prevention and
Recyclin8, with local support also
from the county.
. .
Activilies include education and
awareness projeciS for teachers as
weD as students; enforcement of
Ohio's litter laws; collection IC·
tivity starting .in Marth 10 include a

.,.,'

. !i360.

. This is to alert you that a possible defect, which could result
' In an electrical shock; may exist In a very small percentage _o f

;,'

••
•'•

. Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Group of the Pomeroy
Clum:h of Christ held at the home
of Betty Spenca-.
· Officers are: Kathy Haley, president; Linda Laudmnilt. vice presittent; Betty Spencer, secrewy:
Pauline
Kennedy. . assistant •
secrewy; Janet Venoy, ueasurer:
Pat Thomas, card chainnan; and
, Eileen Bowers, mother-daughter
chainnan .
Eileen Kelly presided at .the

daily program of roadside litter
pickup as well as illegal dumpsite
cleanup; speeial projeciS including
Clean Up Rural Ohio scheduled for
late April and the Ohio . River
Sweep set forJune 15.
Recycling will be vig01'011$ly
promoted year round with special
recycle days held also. Meigs
County has two private recycling
outletS · where IIUU'ked materials
may be discarded. Tri..COunty
Recycling is located on the Route 7
By pass near Pomeroy, and Manle&gt;:
Recycling is acroas from the post · .
.
office in Middleport.
Major appliances are still being
recycled and can be left in the lot
· adjacent to the liuer conii'OI office.
Meigs County if a member of the'
six-county Solid 'Waste DiJtric:t.
~ District Solid Waste Plan was
submitted prior 10 Dec~ 24 to the
Ohio EPA for their approval.
Volunteer help to the program is
always encoumJed. There will be
many. OIIPO"Ulltlies for your club,
orgaruza11011, garden club, scout
trOOp, 4-H club and all others to
take pan.
For infomt8lion contact Meigs
County Litter Control at Union
Avenue and Route 7 or phone 992·

. BROXODENT ELECTRIC T001lfBRUSHES

meeting giving pnyer for the open·
ing. Janet Venoy had devotions
resdinf ''Giving God
Leftovers and scripture reading.
. Cards were sent to the sick and a
miscellancous shower was planned
for the minister.
The mission Sllldy was by Pat
Thoma who recommended n:mem·
bering the service men and women.
She gave pnayers for n:freslunents
served by the hostess to the 11bove
mentioned and Sherri Might and
Eva Dessauer.

eur

January Sale Continues
THRU ~ANQARY 26, 1991
NAJURAUZER, HUSH PUPPIES,
D. MYERS

LADIES DRESS SHOES

lADIES CASUAl
SHOES

25°/o OFF

20°/o OFF

s

· LADIES NATURALIZER

All·You·Can• Eat
Grand BuffetT• lunch

PONDEROSA
1

.20.,,- OFF

,25°/oLADIS

LADIES

.LEATHER BOOTS

LEATHER. PURSES

25°/o OFF

••••••••••
HURRY/

SNOW BOOTS

MATES
OFF

•

WITH COUPON BElOW

.

20°/o

OFF

--+-----~~~~~

·LaCROSSE RUBBER

PUPPIES, CHEIOIEE

DRESS SHOES
OFF

20°/o

OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR

'\20°/o OFF

KIDS
MEAL
(fOI KIDS 10 AND UN DEl) .

99c

ALL

MEN'S,
r , CHILDREN'S

TENNIS SHOES

BROXODENT ELECTRIC T001liBRUSHES .

This product was distributed in·the United Stat~ and
Canada by E. R. Squibb lc Sons, Inc.
If you own. this product, please return it for a refund by
March 31, 1991 via regular mail to:
'

You'll Be Glad You Old!

'MOBILE HOMES

Litter -Control . pqster
coqtest held recently .

TO ALL OWNERS OF

See John or Dick Today

, COLE'S

Social Security Braac:h Manager
In Athens
If you are applying for Social
Secunty disability benefiiS, the
decision as to whelher you are dis·
abllll! Wider the law is made by the
Oi6bility Detertnination Services
office in Ohio. The decision is
made by a team of trained people
that include a physieian (or
psychologist in the case of mental
llllpainneniS) . and a disability
evaluation specialisL
In reaching a decision, every
· reasonable effOrt is made to get
medical evidence from your own
doctor and from hQspitals-or other
f~~~:ilities where you have been
treated The govanment can pay a
reasonable fee for any medical
reports requested.
The doctors and facilities contac·
ted for this purpose are asked for a
summary of your medical hist,ory.
This includes a diagnosis, the date
of onset of the illness or injlliY. the
~~ to which it limiiS ,your :ac·
uvtb~. the resuiiS of any medical
~ tltat Y,~ may have, had, I!,Rd
the b'eaUDent you rece1ved. Your
doctor or the facility is not asked to

make a jud~ement on the extent of
your disabilitr.
·
If the medical information avilil·
able ·from these sources is, not
enough to pennit an evaluation of
· your ·condition, a special examina·
lion or iest may be needed. Social
security will pay for this examination or test, including certain travel
expenses that may be required.
Once a decision is reached on
your claim, Social Security wiD
'send you a written ootice advising
you of the decision. If your claim is
not approved, the notice will teD
y!)u the basis for the decision. It
will also tell you. how you can appeal if you ~ wtth the deci·
sion. If yoilr claim is approved, the
notice will ·reo you when benefits
wiD start and how mucb you will
tllCeive.
More infonnation about Social
Security disability benefits can be
obtained by
callin · Social
Security's toU free tel:lone number, .1-800-2345-SSA (1·8()().2345772). For best service, call early in
the morning or early in the evening
weekdays. The Alben's Social
Security office is located at 221 1/2
Columbus Road and the ·• lbcal
ph~e numberis 592-4480.

I

.131~?
VIII .'

-.

,

Missionary group elects leaders

a

Bills win...

Monday. Janu.-y 21, 1991

Pau• . &amp;

Giants win...

..

63

Gall- 71, St . Ro .. 56

'·
~

'
:••
..•
•
'' •

46

Fullertoo St. 89, New Mexico St. 81
Idaho St. 75, Wl!f!JT St. 71
Unit old 78. Ore1on Ted! 76
Montana 811, E. Wuhlli,tm 87
Montana Sl. 65, idaho 64
.
Nev .·J,u V..asl14 , Lo1111 Bead! St.

.

East Strwlllbul'l 82, Cht!)'ney70
FDV·Madlom T1, Uralnuo 53
.
FonlhUI! 61, Lato)'OISI! 65
Franklin • Mauhall 68, Muhl81·

,,
~

Bakenlleld St. 68, Cai·Rivl!rolde53
Bolae St. 113, N. Arlmna 75 .
Colorado 69, SW MIIIOUrl St. 67
Domtnpez Hills St. 60. L.A . State

By.The Bend ..

McLean added 24 Sunday, send- Bruins to 14-3 ovetall and 3-2 In IIIllCh YldOI')' of lbe • -·
At Iowa City, Iowa, C&amp;lbert
Ing No. 7 UCLA to a 98-81 Pacific the conference and was UCLA's
Cheaney
scored ll points and
Conference victory over 61at In Its last 64 games with the
By Ualted l'reN JalieraaUoaal
Indiana
msde
13 of 14 field-goal
Golden Bears.
Tracy
scored 22 of his C&amp;llfornta.
attempts
to
open
the second half
The victory Improved the
Brian Hendrick helped C&amp;llfor26 points In
Don.
In
beating
Iowa.
nla rally In the secolld half.
At Vluanova, Pa., ChriJ MIUa
scorilla seven polllts during a
scored
26 points on 9-of·1• shoot&amp;l-second span that trimmed
lni
and
gra!;ll!ed nine rebounds to
UC:LA's advantage to 54-47 wtth
17:28 to play. Gerald Madkins lead Arizona "lwer VIllanova - ·
kept the Bruins on top, however, ASU's fifth straight .wta.
scoring 15 of his lll points In the · AtSyracuse,N.Y.,BUlyOwens
. second ha't as UCLA opene&lt;l a scored 24 points· and.. Dave
Johnson scored all of hl819 points
75-56 lead with 12 minutes left.
California, 6-9, 2-4, got 110 In the second half to lead
closer than 14 points the rest of Syracuse past Seton Hall.
At New York, Malik Sealy
the way. The Bears bave lost33 of
their last 34 games at Pauley scored 35 points. lncludlng·16 of
St. John's final 1,, to lead the
Pavll.lon.
Redmen
past Pitt. ·
On saturday, substitute ThoAt
Norman,
Okla., Jeff Websmas HID scored :II points, lnclud-·
lour
strals:Jit
free throws
ter's
hit
log 14 In the second half, and
down
the
stretch
to
help Okla·
Clu:lstlan Laettner had 18 to lead
homa
hold
of!
upset-minded
No. 9 Duke to a 74-60 victory over
No. 5 North Carolina In a fierce Oklahoma State.
At Hartford, CoM., Eric Mur- ·
Atlantic Coast Conference con·
dock
scored 30 polllts and Marvin
.test In Durham, N.C.
''You could not have a more Saddler added 24 to rally Provi· Intense game than this, with two dence from a 15-polnt halftime
teams playing such great de- deficit to !In upset ofConnectlcu t.
fense, " said Duke head · coach The Huskies had not ycelded 100
Mike Krzyzewskl. "It was dlfll· points since 1978-79.
At Atlanta, Georgia Tech built
cult to score for both teams. We
· had one little run and that a 34-17 halftime lead and tben
coasted behind Keony Ander·
seemed to do lt."
Duke Improved to 15-3 overall son's 19 secoJKI-half points to Its
and 4-1-ln the ACC, while the Tar upset of VIrginia. ·
At Cullowhee, •N.C., Calvin
.Heels, who were led by Rick
Talford
scored ll points and
Fox's 18' points, fell to 13-2 and .
pulled
down
12 rebounds to send
2-1.
The Blue · Devils' defense East Tennessee State to Ita 13th
forced North Carolina Into an straight vlctoey.
At Baton Rouge, La., Sbaqullle
uncharacteristic . 25 turnovers
O'Neal
scored 32 points and
anct
19-for-54
shooting.
North
·
l'ES! - N.Y. Glaal&amp;
·
Jeff llolliettler (left) rolla
grabbed
14 rebounds to lead
Pete
Chilcutt
was
held
carollua'
s
backwards Ia apparent exultation foUowiqlhll Deld goal by kicker
LOuisiana
State over Mtsslsslppl.
to
14
points
and
none
over
the
.
Mllit Babr (t) 111 Sullday's NFC champlolllbtp game ap.t•t the
At
.Chestnut
Hill, Mass., fresh·
final
12:
34.
Hubert
Davis
bad
10
Saa Fraacllico 41era. Becauae of the Glaatll' 15-ll! win, there will be
points
and
Geoi-ge
Lynch
had
just
man
Charles
Harrison
scored all
no "~peu" for the Nlaen lhlll year. (UPI)
eight, seven under his average.
of his 16 points In the second half
Trailing 34-28 with 18: 20 to and Dlkembe Mutombo bad a key
(Continued from Page 3)
play, Duke went on a . 10.0 run . three-point play with 71 secoms
Young then fired a 25-yard pass , "I've never seen a loclterroom
capped by Hill's three-point goal · left to lead GeOrgetown over
to Brent Jones and Craig picked as quiet as when we came In here at 14:23 to take the lead tor good. Boston Col~e.
...
up 11 yards on two runs before after · the s:ame," 49ers lineIn other games Involving other
At Fullerton, C&amp;ll!., Agee Ward
fumbling.
· •·
backer Mike Walter said. ''To Top 10 teains, No. 1 Nevada-Las· scored 26 points and grabbed 15
Nose tac!Pe · Erik Howard come so cloie and lose .. I know · Vegas hammered. LOng Beach rebounds to lead Fullerton State
knocked the ball loose and there Is going to be some second State 114-63, No. 2 Arkansas to an upset that .suappe&lt;I'New
linebacker "l'aylor recovered In guessing."
routed Southern Methodist 98-70, Mexico State's stx:game winning
the air at tht; New York.43.
Montana and,Taylorhooked up No. 3 Oblo State trouaced Dlaoll streak. &lt;
Quarterback Jeff Hostetler, for a 61-yard strl!&lt;e for the 8N5, No. 4 Indlalla ripped Iowa
At Hattiesburg, Miss., Darrtn
replacing Injured starter Phil game's ·only touchdown on San 99·79, No. 6 Arizona defeated Chancellor scored 18 of his 21
Simms, directed a 33-yard drive. Francisco's first play of the VIllanova 72-64, No. 8 Syracuse points In the second half The seven-year veteran hit second halt. The slrlke snapped a
topped No. 21SetonHall78-64 and Including sevl!n In a 24-second
pressure-packed passes of 19 6-6 halftime tie. Taylor made the No. 10 St. John's edged No. 14 span - to send Southern Mlssls·
yards to Mark Bavaro and 13 catCh on the sidelines at the Pittsburgh 73-71.
sippi over.Memphls State.
yards to Stephen Baker to set up Giants 44, brushed off Everson
Also, No. 11 Oklahoma edied
Babr's kick.
· Walls an~ eluded a diving Myron Oklahoma State 76-72, Provi· ''That was a hell of kick," Guyton at the seven.
dence upset No. 12 Connecticut
Georgia Tech, Penn .
Parcells said. "He's a hell of
"I was going for the lntercep- 108-102, Geolllla Tech shocked
State play in da88ie
. tlon," Walls said. "lthougbtl got No. 15 VIrginia 78-51, No. 16 East
klcker."
' Baht, a J2:year veteran, was my ha~ on the ball, but h~ got Tennessee Stare beat Western
EAST RUTIIERFORD, N.J.
cut In training camp by Cleve- two." .
,
Carollll4 93-76; No. 17 Louisiana
(UPI) - Geolllla Tech, vole\! NO.
land but signed ,'by New York
Mike Cofer accounted tor the State toppi!d Mississippi 87-71,
1 by UPI' s Board of Coaches and
lifter Raul Allegre was Injured 49ers other potitts on field goals of No. 18 Georgetown defeated
the
nation's only major undeearly In the season. His five field . 47 and 35 yards as the 49ers were Boston College 56-49, Fullerton ·
_
t
eated
team In 1990, will play
goals set an NFC championship held to 240 yards. San Francisco State upended No.19 New Mexico
Penn
State
In the 9th annual
rushed tor only 39 yards on 11 State 89-81, No. 20 Southern
record.
Kickoff
Classic
on Aua. 28 at
Baht kicked the game-winner carries.
Mississippi beat Memphis State
Giants
Stadium.
•
just Inside the left uprights while
''They had a very aggressive 87-77, FlorldaStatenlppedco-Nb. ·
ne
Yellow
Jackets
who
caphis teammates huddled In prayer defense today," &lt;49ers tackle 22 South Carollnil 81-!10, co-No. 22
1
ln!rontofthebench.Bahr'sother Steve Wallace said. "They did
Utah thumped Air Force 57-47, tured the Atlantic Co8s t Conferfield goals .were from 28. 42, 46 not have to worry about run
No. 24 New Orleans defeated Pan ence champlonsblp, finished
'
blocking and just had to look' for
and 38 yards.
American 72-54 and No. 25 . their season 11.0.1 with a convtnc·
lng 45-21 drubbing of Nebraska In
Hos teller was not spectacular, the pass. Anytime a defense has
Wyoming outlasted Brigham
the Florida Clti'WI Bowl.
but was steady In directing a that opportunity It's going to
Young 86-80.
·
turnover-tree otlense. He com- cause some havoc."
At Las Vegas, Nev., Larry
pleted 15 of 27 passes for 176
The Giants' best TD chance ' Johnson scored 23 points and
. yards and rushed tbree times for came ·on their flnt . possession Greg Anthony had 22 to lead
11 yards and a key first down In when they marched to the 49ets
Nevada-Las Vegas to Its 24th
his sixth career start and second 11. Halfback Dave Meggett straight victory - . tbe lo~t
In the playoffs.
tbrew to wide open fullback
winning su:eak In college b8sketMontana hit 18 of 26 for 190 Maurice Carthon In the end zone
ball and tylf\g the all-time school
yards.
on first down, but carthon
record.
The loss. coml)lg off a turnover dropped the ball. After two
At ·Fayetteville, Ark., Todd
by the normally sure-handed Hostetler lncompletlons, Baht
Day scored 21 points and closed
Craig, left the 49ers stunned.
kicked his first field goal for a 3-3
off
Southern Methodist ·rally
tie.
midway through the second 1\alf
to lead Arkansas to Its 14th
·
straight
lrlumph.
(See BILLS on Page 4)
At Columbul, Ohio, Jlllllll:t'
Jacklotl aeored'n poiDta, lnclud·
offense the Raiders were able to just 13 of 31 passes for 150 yards
ln111 In a aecolld·half bll&amp;l IbM .
produce was .:ie!f Jaeger's 41· and throwing five lnterceptloJlS
carried undefeated Ohio State to
yard field goal In the opening before being' pulled In the fourth
quarter. autfalo set a playoff quarter for VInce Evans.
record for points In a half.
"There wasn't one aspect of
"I would say we're one of the this team where anyone could
better teams In the league now," say they played well," Schroeder ·
Talley said. ,
·
said.
"Every time they ·had the ball . The Bills won titles. In ihe old
they were able to make thlng~ AFL ln.1964 and 1965, but lostthe
happen," Raiders linebacker . title gaine ·to J{linsas City In 1966
Jerry Robinson said.
•
In which the winner went to the
The Raiders were without Pro first Super Bowl.
Bowl running back Bo JackSon,
Robinson, a 12-year NFL vetewho · was sidelined by a hlp ran.w)lo played In Super Bowl XV
'~
"·
t"
\
pointer suffered In last week's with Philadelphia, had a word of
playoff Victory over Cincinnati .
caution for the Bills.
Raiders · quarterback Jay
"Whoever they play In Tampa
Schroeder was hounded by the Bay, If they don't take them .
w.ITIII ·
Bills defense throughout, hitting seriously, they collid be blown
• 11'· 1"
,
out of there,".he sald.

Weot

103
Dowlllll 78, SouthampJon 77
Drew 68, Lycomlni 59
orex.t 115, c. Connectteut 69
Ouqueoor 87, Penn St. 81 (Q'l')

.

Sacred Heart 62.• Lowell61

'fhe ·naiJy Sentinel·

·
•
••
•

Please

'·'

Somenet Labs
700 W. Michigan Boulevard
Michigan Oty, Indiana 46360
.Include the date of purchase and your name and

address. Allow 6-8 weeks for a refund.

•

' I

''

'

.

.·

O.ur Spring Shoes Are ·
Now Arriving!

HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
210 EAST MAIN
PO-OY

. GALLIPOLIS
·
UPPEI RIVER ID.-RT•.7
(Across from the Airport)

992-6254 '

..I'
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�Page

6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaoy-Midclaport. Ohio

Monday, J.,.....y 21, .1991
.

NAnoNAL WUTHUI FOMCAIT MOM 1 N1·2f·lll0 1~ 1·22·11

Northern .Ohio gets six inches of,snow
By United ~'rae lateraailoaat
Winter came out or hiding In
1!j91 and dumped dose Of SIIO\Il
across Ohio Sunday night and
Monday morning.
By 7: ~ a.m., four to six Inches
of snow was on the iJ'OURd In
extreme northeast Ohio, two to
tour Inches In ,the rest of
northeaat Ohio and tbe north
central regiOn and generally one .
to two Inches elsewllere.
Befol'(! this stonn t)le Nl\tlonal
Weatller Service In Oeveland
reported only 2.2 Inches ot'snow
for the month and 9.6 Inches of
snow for the season, with -m ostof

a

tba t c omtng the week of
Christmas.
A winter storm warning. remained In effect through Mondat
tor the eastern lakeshore counties of Oblo and through the
morning hours. over tbe remainder of northeast and north
central Ohio. Oties In the warn. lng area Included Aahtabula,
Youngstown, Akron, Canton,
aeveland, Medina, ·Ashland and
Sandusky.
Snow continued to fall over a
large portion oLJohio early
!\o!Onday morning. The heaviest
snow, however, was confined to

-____;·Area deaths-•
Grace Elizabeth Ellis, 56, Of
Tllus Road, RuUand, died Sun·
day, J an. 20 , 1991 at Veterans
M~rnorlal Hospital.
. ~rn Nov. 13, 1934 In Cheshire,
she was a daughter of the late
Doilglas Darst and Mary Ruth
Gll)nore Darst.
She was also preceded In death
by'a brother, Alonzo Darst.
Surviving are her husband,
Dale Ellis; two sons, Sidney
Eugene (Gene) EIUs, Ga!Upolls
and Paul Lee (Bobl of Middlepor t; three grandchildren; a
brOther. Richard (Dick) Douglas
of1Cheshire; two sisters, Mrs.
B~dy (Ellen) Gilbert of Cheshire and Mrs, Glea~Helen)
Gilbert of Gallipolis
~e was a member of udand
~will Baptist Church, where
sel'vlces will be conducted 2 p.m.
Wednesday, by" the Rev. Paul
Taylor. Burial follows In Gravel
~Cemetery .
.
Friends may call Tuesday, 3to
5 :p.m. - and 7 to 9 p.m. at
. W)lugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home.
There will l!lso be Visitation
Wednesday at the. church, noon
until the time of services.
•

1\!adge E. Alexander

•
Madgef E . ThAitrdexaAnder, G84, for·
merly o 738
ve., a 111polis, died Saturday, Jan. 19, 1991at
Helzer Medical Center. She was
1M retired owner of M'adge's
P!ftce. .
Born Oct. 12,19061n Gallipolis,
she was a daughter of t11e late
Ri!Y Alexander aQd Bessie Ar·
niJld Alexander.

Deilrt Slana ............
De is a 1971 rt r til ....

-·

S. SJL Plllicll A. 1111" 'sD 81·
66-0876, 8th Evac•!Mjm Jicf't I,
Operation Deist Sbield, A.P.O,

NCw Y~ N.Y. 09616.

..
· llarllituate

...

TO PlACE. AN
' AD CAll 992-2156
.

MONDAY thru FIIDA Y I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED sUNDAY

,....

·COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Pollee officials are Investigating
the s lay! ngs of a we.s t sld!l man,
Friends may call _at die funeral his disabled wife and another
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 woman.
p.m. on1Uesday. .
Robert VanSickle, his wife
Donations may be made to the . Marilyn, and Cathy Taylor, were
American Red Cross.
found Sunday In the VanSickle

home, .pollee said. The VanSickles were In their _
50s and Taylor
was In l!et 20s.

flospital news
V.etetans MeDJorial Hospital

SATIJRDAY ADMISSIONS •
Ella Schultz, Racine.
SATURDAY
DISCHARGES
·Patsy L!ludermilt, Pearl Haw·
thorne ·and Kenneth Wolfe.
· SUNDAY ADMISSIONS • Jqlm

i''

"1 •

1.0.01'. Cemecery mMason.

Friends may call Tuesday 2 to 4
11114-7 10 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

'
Bertha 0. Robinson

•
llenha 0. Stover Robinson, 95,
of :Racine, died Sunday aftanoon,
Jan. · 20, 1991; aa Velerans
Mimorill Hospillll following ex-

an

• ~e.iJaa. .Slle was a .
was bom 1111 Nov. 11, 1895
in~ W.Va., the daughter of
thlllle Bljsbe IIIII Ullie Mae Casto

s.o-.

.

Survivin.l m two dlughters,

Mabel Sbidda 1114 Cilia Mae Sar·
gena. bodl of Racine; Cour. sons,
W1Diam A.
Racine;
HOWifd
Rollinllll", ~
W:VL, Raymond B. RoND11111,
Berm, N.C., IIIII Edwlril A. Robin·
soil, ZepbydllD, Pia.; four ~
HPel MifdleU, Columbus, FIIIICCI
. Cell. Ca1lcll HiD, Velva lflughl,
Walter, W.VL, llld Focie ,tllyman,
Racine; one brother, Willie .SIDVCI',

c.

............ .
I

-· ·--'"

l

Rnhi....

•·

~·

'

K:nIO~~n~ w~..:: .
:freve=~t~.ma; Ri!:

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., Inc.
' . PLIASANI VALLEY HOSPITAL

an accidellt on State Route 32S.

EAI,
NOSE &amp; THROAT•

::!.!.or~~=~mu;

~=ns K.:1J3 :::. ~

GENERAL ALLERGIST

1HURSOAY ~APEA
tHID,AY PAl'• A

SUNOAY I'AP!R

"WE HAVE HEARINS -AID!"

Stocks
DaUr tteell prices

.

(.b Dill: It Lm.)

&amp;r,ee ud Marll8mltll
of Blant, Ellll lo Loewl
Am Electric Power ., ....... .... 271)1
Ashland QJJ ........... .....
30%
AT&amp;T ..... ........ ..........':....... .. 31%
Bob Evans .................. .. ......14%
Charming Slioppes ..............11 'It
Oty Holdlni Co....... ...........14Y.J
Federal Mogul .... ................ l3%
Goodyear -TAR .... , ............ ..18"
Key Centurion ....................10%
Lands' End ................-......... 16%
Umlted lnc.... ................... .21"
Multimedia Inc ................... 60Y.J
Ru Restaurants ............. .. .. Y..
Robbins A Myers ................19Y.J
$Jioney'alnc ....... , ............... 12"
Star Bank ... :.......... :............ l611 ,
Wnd'I'l
.
"'
e y s _nt ....... .................
6u
W:th
74
9r lorton Ind ................. .22"
0 ••• •• ••

.

'·

(304) 675-1244

Featuring: Fresh Scrambled Eggs, ,
Homestyle Bucuits, Danish, ·
Muffins, Pancakes, and
Much, Much More!

ONLY$2.99
Mason Family Restaurant
Rt. 33

(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)

¥.

'

.
..
. --·-·- ·-· -. -----~-

M11110n, WV

. (304)' 773-5321

I .

....... -·

. .._

- ·---- --·---

. ' ...
-·- --·- - ..
~ --

..

·-----.

.

.

...,

,,12

tlu·

'·

GMtia C~nty
ArM Code614

Meip County
Area Coft 114

Mn.,. Co .. WV
....
304

446 Gallipoiis

992 _ . . . . ,

• 7&amp;

Pt. ,.,....,,

461
171
713
112

Leon

ItS

Let•t

937

• .,.. . . '

367 Chahire
388 VInton
245 Ato Gr~de

z,oo

z,oo

,

2&amp;1 Guyen Din
'143 Arabia Oiat.

9ft
843
247
941

379 Walnut

742

- ..

Ch•..,
Pootlond
Ruttend

1I
11

c-.

l ... , Filla
.....

o.n........,
..........
..,_,._from

CommllllonNcelvelawrtt~

.......................

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Ollie. .... oollllnd ........,.

I'LAINTIFP
VI.
UniEAown HelrL Dau'u 11 •. - ·
........... Aa.. r a&amp;DN. · IIIII riii* of

.. ...

or.......,a~lllel-rrl

Mollll VWIIIIIme, D11111111,
'

DIFI!IIIOANTI
c- No. to-,Cf_l!·211
Afl't DA •m

·
--., Olllo.
CoumyofMelaa

'

IIICHAII D ~- IZILAGYI.

llalng flrat dutY - · •·
po... ..,d aey~illethelao
duly eppalftlad, qualllled
Md ectlng Anlllant AltOrMY Gel~eNI rrl tile ..... ol

Ohio; ..,. l'Wtoiln• ..,.
nerd I. HuM. 01:- of

,_...,...., .... of
Ohio• ...ally l*l'wllllon.

to :JMOIMIItll ... "D"Irty

with~.=-wtthallweya
-.yo.._
•ny

miMNI- ._....-.....
tMrilefoN riUNoM 10

Wylllal&gt;u-.

rlghta of In•

·&amp;=at·. ·

otolm ..._ by In•

~

.-rdeclln

vo-

lu:na 231, ., II..• 131. of
11Mi DMtl Recofdl' of Malga

no--

County. Ohio.
............ -.1 lllo¥•
.ahollfu_
,.,..,,.....
or their _,_

MY· lite Ml A - NO LATIR THAN 21 DAYI ....
... _ , ......... of tiNI . ..
wit

111M"'
"' .,. •..........
111 dunledto-wllhoad

__ ............ '"'.

dl._.. ad therein IIIMIIO fill ltlelrtlglltto•-·•ndthe
................. lof.-11 ....
tllet tile U'*11own · 8IHI Juclltuwnt wll\ be
. . . . .d eooo-rdlngty, Civil
Dtlulllll
Rula1ZIAK11.

BERNARD I . HUIIIT.

~~ . . ., ..........,.llo.l

1. 28;

Notice

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t._
fill•....._ ,
421 Heuas
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Colum... Towt IIIII .._.. 7
ond • - . . _ ..... C... dlatultiM• te lie Ill ttlleil
um11111 ,_....,, ..... w11111n 100flllll.r Turt lip

"

PubliC Nollce

lh4lfl ..... .. ~
the . . . willie ............ to
IMedgeoflhe--.1
aurtaoe. lnt-IH ........
rney - - .. .. pullllo
niMIInl of the Columllla

TownaiiiJ Tru- on PH......, 4. 1111 e1 7:00P.M .
10 Ill Mid et 1M Calumkll
r-nll t, Hal, Vallo\' .....,
Oh•.
11121.

llute fl01:1a-t-04,leulftwn ONe 'CNI Caq nw • .

of 1M Ten Mill U111111111M
NotiM lahe!Wy.._....,
fn ..,.....of a fl111futllln
du.........
1M
of....._ Ollie.

ol,..,_
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.,e. Wed would ~ togltlwr 111111 10 up to

CAIN'S.
OfMtMt..rt ·
UPIIOLSIDY

; HenciT. . . .
Cullom Dntlll
MY..,.Ili,,IDI

w•

ton hi did dill
t11at hi didn't Mnt to
. wony hll flmlly....... may ............ to' day, IIIII theiMIMfltt Ill 11ft 1M lllllta"IM
fHI ... It - · Juat ,........
· IJ'nu..· ., NU.td SIN/fer
In
MIIIIIIY of

ledly mlnlll

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taldhaltMitiH.
.
hid tell llelnt on Mill•
11on111 tell of 1_.1 mila et 1

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fNeeth_ .............
-

=

........ -

I&amp;IOfll·

.1

1.

.

l'

THIS l''xl"
... . BULLET I~ BOARD
. SPACE AVAILABLE

1

...' AT 15.00 PER DAY. ·. .
'

orfu! IIIR,

·-d . . . . . . ..
.,. ...... the

..... c_,.,,o~~~e
II

CiM'. Ctu:ah iUift

W. lay WMI We Do.
W• Do What We 1.,
ll·t..UA

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PIP'-

tlma.

eor.dltotN•td••u llllhlllll!£·~
1111 lalt cllyl hi •uld ••• - lt'PIN
know Jull hoW eklk Ill 1111lly wu. Tilt fll·

ta!Wtlon and ...... ,..,..,.

.

It

pond, and
n!Jht wa woukl
feed tilt floh
orumbo, anclothtrtlmtl
wa woukl to to filii, We would Dill Our
hocllla Into tilt Wlttr lind ,lull Itt end ....
Wa nevw cautht many filii. but I did 08loh
• lot of ...-1• t111t will Iaiit ma a .,._

hll family. Allaut ._,..,. ...... ._..

I •

'

,I

111111 en·

. Our fllmlly "'doctor" ttlpa. Wllln
enyofue . . . tlltldo·got • "booboo,",..._
wao alw8\fl thort to ta11e - of 111. AIM1
when hi WM'IOftl. ---~~~••
untH ho _,...loolt at our weund lftd put
band·lido on to mallt them fwl batter.
Earl lh.tt. worktil hard all lila llfll until
he l'llllrtd end took tlmt .. trl1111111'1d"""

..

tlon.............. ......
Cclunly.............. ..

_,.. . . . 7

Joyed. Ht would tllkt ut g111ncllldo uptotht

:at:= _.,

_, ,.,_,., 1H1, tiNI

•1ness

the " h - lhot ........... "'"' . . . ..
ll"'•nwn thllugllllllllllwiYitUml• t1
win .
Fllhlng waa alao - ' h l n l

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7 :JO ....... , ...... ...., .

In 111mory

EARL 8.

el

. . . . . . . . . . . . . 11111

.,..

.................... ohaft

. THE FAMILY MAN

.

.

fofThe
MIIIIINC!Ofl
wll Ill etlell et I:JO ......
a.m.IIIMI......,....,UIId

NOTICI OP ILICTION
OnTul.ewllll-

A"*tt. ONe 41701
....,_ tD Ohio Coel
Mlftlftl 8IHI Rnla sulllin

MllpMIMNe.:I,II. O.Iea
410. A"'""'- ONe 41701'

ua

Public Nollce

P.o. t.4111

ltl-1 Md lleollflletlon
Illite 1f01:13;a-04.,1outh·

··=~~- =todlvl

BULLEtJft, BOARD
.

tlon.rthe-IWdtetM

80UTHIIIN OHJO COAL
COMIIANYMI!IQI MINI! NO. 2

SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
COMPANY- .
MEIQI MINE NO. 2
II. 0. loa 410
A..... Ohio 41701
......8111 Ia Olllo C4NII

..1ft.. ..................I
dtllar. 1110........
llliMLml.... toewtleltM

.......u ....... l)trllllft
.t c.ta•n ...._...,.
of Melee htolu•-,~~~ ,
for ...,_, wllll tMt\tlll ,..

County. The po1p111d ohaft
wiN tteve no eftlat•the
Dlaturllence of-the Ill DOIIduiiiOd ,. . . - . . .r
1M ~~- Mllltloe. 111tttr•ed ,.,... mey oomment •• • pullllo fiiMIInl of
tile Coltifllllle
T-.IIID
llellruary 4,
1•1 et 7:0011.M. to Ill held
.. 1M c•m•t• ,_,..,
Hall. v.lley ....., Ohio.
111:11. 1to

1-...-------

PUBLIC NOTICi

= . . . ,-...

.............. .,......., _.......... . . . .
...... c-er. .

.been 11111ny lft!lt men. Abrahim Unooln
and John Kennedy - • famoue prllldentl. Henry l'ord and John ROGit.,.llr
dllllngillahlcl bullll...mlfl, and John
Wa~ and C~ry Grant wtn . .-.cl aotora.
AU oftMM men POIIIIIId manyfanu.dc
charaottrlltlot. but I don't 1hlnk lillY of
them Oould- 001t9art to hrf lhaffw,
who a prominent family man. He II·
waya put hla family flrlt end iftlda IICih one
feellpiCiiel In hla
-y:
One of the -va Pepa lllPflllld hla tov.
for hie family - • playlnf lloroo ohoeo with_.

..

51

Ace•••

' ' ,..,.. 11•11 •

53 ~ .......
14 .. Mile . .. .,......_
II luilllin....... .

u,....Teu;1tllt, ltellllluod
......
fMt .......
CMinty,100
c•m•t•
T - Cllu-11 huwlilslll.... 7
,.-,.,..,...
tht, ..._. 7, hllnllnt.,. In CwluneM&amp;
PNKIIMIIIY0.4 .... ..,..
Ollie. The
of 1M lnl•n ua.n ol (ir I U I 'IMft wlllwft M

Throughout Alllll'loan hlltorl thlrt IHtve

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22 Mon.., • LMfl
2) Prot•IMMNI . .vtcw

ton atrne-nt 10 lhol effHt
and '"' -ompenyJn1 ,..
Queet for en oral hearing on
lhlal-•. thla m•tt• wlllla
declded on 1M beala ol the
lnfor-tlon oonteined In the
appHoetlon and alfldwlta
eubmltted by the appNc11nt.
Funt~er Into-• fiiiiY be
obtained by oon*'llll the
Pvllllc UtiMIH COtMII-n
of Olllo. 180 Eaat · ltnet.
Columllua, Ohio
Public Noi'432H-til73:
1--~...;...~-~11121. 11c
P'UIUC NOTICE

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Kem 111m, 11t1d U. I . Horten'a Adtlitlon Ia Pum•roy.

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187 Coolville

lla ~~~~- _eny, AtW 1ft.
WMtlld ,.,..... finn. •rporotlan, or entity lllet oen
lllow · Long
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thei
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allould not be granted
IUIIIortty to
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with the Commlulan 1 Witt·
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followirrl{ I «•1(;/Jhtllll' (•xl'laartl{«'.~ ...

I

OAY lfFORE PUBUCATKIN
11 .00 AM . SATUROAY
PM . MONDAY·
PM . TUfiiOAY
2 .00 P M , WEDNESDAY
2'00 P.M . THURSDAY
2 ~0 PM . fRIOAY

,aitu

\.1

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... ......

32 .................... .
33 , ............ .
31 &amp;uHt•·--~

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17 tltliflhe ..... of Lol 18 llllck to the aherehoktera of

SENioR CrrtzENs SPECIAL
.t\IJ.•You-C.MIE·To-EAT
8 .ut-11

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Put!llc Notice

Heard about

MOIUA.Y•I)uoA.Y,

.

COPY DEAOUNE
MDNDAY PAPEr.
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNE.SOAY PAP£11

Perry F. Hotfl'nan, $, ·was ·
taken by the Meigs County E;MS
to Holzer Medical Cente~. where
he.was treated and released for
various bruises and cu Ia.

.

$13.00

31 - HOM. . . . . ..

2 II' Mt •a;
3 .............. .
4 Giwo-

.42
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Cla.~ ..,ifi"tl fiUJW~ I'OI'«'r

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Mason Family Restaurant'

r--:-::-:-:-........._.______.._ _..___

Yard $1d011

c:.,. ' ·

RAPID REFUND?-

for

.20

I I'

• A c;:ti~as.tl•ed achteJIIMn••d pt'iiCo.rd in lhit Dally Sunt•t8i ltJt
clu11f•td thitlwr. 1\tiHn•• C•d &lt;~nd luglll ftblicnt
wtll OIIMI.•PP•at "' 11ut Pt Pl•••m R.yt5lur and I he ~alii
pof.s Ody TniM.ut•... ow:htnO OWf 18.000 hon••

EMS responds to 18 calls

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·In MumOfNo•

Hoffman, driving a 1987 Ford
Taylor wa5 a live-In caretaker
Ranger pickup, was heading-east
for Mrs. VanSickle, who had lost
when according to the lnvestipt·
a leg to diabetes.
lng trooper's report, he "fell
While Investigating the slayMeeks, Middle!IOJ1. and Lena Bax- asleeP and went off the road way
lngs, homiCide detectives found
ter, Pomeroy.
to Impact with a u llllty pole.
between four and seven pounds of
SUNDAY
DISCHARGES
Hoffman was not cited In the
. what they believe Is cocaine
None.
·
crash.
·
hidden In the home, said Delee·
Units of Meip CountY Emer- squad went 10 the Middleport tlve Raymond Norwood.
gency Medi&lt;:al Services responded Police Department for Greg Hayes.
·to 18 caDs for assistance over the Hayes was taken to Vetcmns.
'•'
weebnd.
.
At 1:1Sr p.m., Rutland squad
On Saturday II ll:S3 a.m, Mid· went to Salem Street for Frank
ftances Stewart
dleport
lire depai bnent went 10 Hoffman, who was liken to Holzer.
Frances G. Stewart, 77, of West
CLEVELAND (UPI) - SaturZuspan
Hollow
Road for a chimney At 5:19 p.m., Middle~ squad day's winning Ohio Lottery
Col11mbia, died Sundsy, Jan. 20,
tire at the David R09S residence.
went to Page Street for Johp numbers:
1991 , in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At
3:03
p.m.,
Tuppers
Plains
ftre
Meeks,
who was transported to
Born · Dec. 16, 1913, in Point
Plck-3
department
·went
to
West
State
Veterans.
At 5:S4 . p.m., Pomeroy
Pleasant, she was a daughter of the
416.
late Oliver and Alice Cora (Me· ROUie 681 10 die Calvin Hawk squad went 10 Americare for Lena
Ticket sales: $1,543,649.50.
residence for a brush tire. A1 S: 11 Baxtec. She was transpcri:d to Payoff:
Dalliel) Mattox.
$444,454.50.
..
p.m., 1\Jppcn Plains squad was Veterans. AI 6:11 p.m., Racine
~he was also pRCeded in dealh
Plck-4
by · her husband, Leo Edward dispalcbed to Bast State Route 681 squad went to County Road 35 for
0943. .
Stci.vart in 1982, and a son, Robert for a IIIOUir vehicle accident, and Tim Wolfe, who was taken to
Put America's Tax Team to
Ticket sales : $285,875.50 .
transpOr1ied Jeasica Barritlp to VeteranS. At 6:44 p.m. Rutland Payoff:
E. f.'lcDaniel in 1987.
L
$105,700.
p.n employee of the Mason t'ur· Velalns. A1 6:22 p.m., Middleport squad was sent to Salem Street for
Mon. Thru Fri. 9 AM·8 PM: Sit. 9 AM·&amp; PM
Cards
nitfpre fattory for 23 years, she was squad went to Chcishire for an autq Grace EUis. Ellis was liken to
Queen of hearts.
818 EAST MAIN STREET-POMEROY
a 'l'lember of the West Columbia accident Pam Shaw lefused Jreat· Veterans. At 6:56 p.m., Racine
Five of clubs.
992-8874 .
U111ted Methodist Cllurch and the , ment there. ·Racine squad was 11ent squad went to Barringer Ridge
Ten of diamonds.
to
,State
Route
338
at
8:16p.m.
for
Road for Owen Dailey, who was
M$011 Senior Citizena.
·
Five of spades.
Hairy
Hiu;
who
was
taken
to
Holtransported 10 Pleasant Valley. At
~urvivon include a dauglner and
sales: $89,520. Payoff:
Ticket
soR-in·Jaw, Dollie J. and James zer. At 8:45 p.m., Middleport squad 7:51 p.m., Racine squad went 10 $39,400.
.
lnUISjlllltM to South Second Wells. Run Road for Pearl Haw·
Oliver of West Columbia; two sons SuperLoito
for l!arl Glass. Glass taken 10 thorne. Hawthane was liken· to
.
.
and" daupten-in-law; Eu~
3, 8, 12, 33134, 39.
'
·
v...._
Pleasant
Valley.
At
10:51
p.m.,
Rt. 33
and Suree SteWart of Jacksonville,
Ticket
sales:
$6,513,899.
Mason,
WV
On Slmday at 12:18 a.m., Rut· Middleport squad went to Page
,N.(:., ~D. llld Lclreaa ~l·
lUcke~
land squad ·wentto Leading Credc Street l'or· Dorothy Gilmore, who
tol!;o ·of Bulfalo, W.Va.; a Siller,
131714.
Bouy Lemley, who was ~ transported to Veteralis. . •
EtiSel Roush of Atbens; Ohio; one ROid
Ticket sales: $866,274.
taken
10
Pleuallt
Valley Holpital.
~er. EAiwanl Mattox of Point
At 12:19 a.m. MiddlqJort liqUid ·
~
PI~; 12 pidclliklren llld six
great-grandcllildren.
·
'Jbe funeral will be Wednesday, \
p... .-, at the Foglesong Funeral
Hctne with the Rev. Terry Alvarez
ofllcialiJII. Burial. will be in the

Loitery numbers ·

.

0,... 111 Wordo

.06/U.,
' t1 . 30/ Ay
lli
Monthly
R••• Me lor con•cutiwe runt. btolllftW9-8flwiM Met\•...

'Adt thM 'eftUII be ...... "' adv•nCtl Ml!
Car ill ot lhtnkli
Ht~ppy , Ad~

Cheshire man hurt in Sunday crash
~.

10 '

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t'rinle
slayi"ng·
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Wonk
16
18
16
16

Oaya
1
3 '

•Aec.iwa t .ftO •counc for adl ,-id ·~ ••ncu.
r
'fr.. Mis Gi'te.W8Yift-foundAda und•15wor&lt;hw•IIM
"'" 3 ..., ... no ctt-.e,
·
.
"Puce of .tt t- aM c••• I• tentS doublu price of ad COli.
' 7 .,.oint kne )rpe only uMd
•Sentinel • 1101 Nt_pon•ibl• for ertonaher first d., . tChltdl.
,., etrCHt hrM diW ld mnt IMP"f) - Call b.to.-e 2 .00 p .m .
d., •'~"' pulllhc'Mton to m'a tl.ttcorrection.

r::=~~ ~-c:m~
~30

s.

'

POLICIES
• Ads uutsedu M.....- O.Ui•., M•un counhes mull lie pre ·

Ebersbach

R¢v. Don Meadows officiating.
Burial will. be in Beec
. h Grove
Cemetery.
.

· ;'

I

-Meigs_announcements-·-

Marion

I I

Jaraertllllpacvl ;Jt
....
,.tiM .....

WILLilM M nOiii&amp;U

DAVE CANPIBLD

:S •.

II 1M IIIII

BMBt•a .... -alJ

druc·iadllced deatbl.

-----Weather-----

DB,.,...

A hell

'"';.dole II· lmpUcited

In neatly · one-tldrd of all reported

u::lted

cft~r;t;~n~r
a~nc~n:::~e·a;Jn: n~~~1~m~.:': fu:!';· 'PbliCitp
"'~robe
brother, James Calloway of Uni!M Methodist Church, with ,

·Pilrtsmouth.
·:;he was a member of John Gee '
cliapel
AME.
•Services
will be conducted 1
"!ln. Tuesday, at Waugh-Halley·
"
Wood Funeral H_ome, the Rev·
Eddie Buffington offllcatlng.
BUrial follows In Pine Street
Qimetery.
·
friends may call at the funeral
hl!rne. Monday, 6 to 8 p.m .
•Pallbearers will be Robert
casey, Gilbert Craig Sr. , Donald
Blirden, Charles Williams, Brett
l;lqgan and Claude Geiger.

·

.... .

~

Racine; 17 graD(:llildml; 22 great·
1
gnnc:bildren; 81\(1 eight greal·great·
'Thursdai,.- and fair :weather
lloutii-CelliPal Oblo •.
grandelliJdreo.
.
She WIIS~ in death by-her
BeComing clear Monday night, across the state on Friday. Highs, .
b band
R Robinso
with a low near five-. Sunny will be In the 20s Wednesday.·
us
,
.
n; a
grandd!l"ghter, Marlene Fisher; a
Continued from page 1 ,
Tuesday, with highs In the low ranging from 15 to 25 Thursday,
grandson, Ra)'IIIOIICI Robinson; l\lld
------------:.----,.---~ 20s~
and from the mlcHeens to tile· _
live brothen.
.
of tl)em Us-ted as missing In
shown on Iraq I television Sunday
·
lower 20s Friday. OVernight lows .
Exieilded forecas$
· ShewasamemberoftheRacine •. actlon,stoOdat14,thePentagon
lnunlfonn. ·
will
range from five to 15
Weclaeiday tbrourb Frida)' .
u 'ted Mcd!odist Chwch the said. A tollil of eight U.S.
The three Americans were
Wednesday
and ThurSday mornSnow likely Wednesday, with
Methodist Women ~~ the warplanes had been shot down Identified as Lt. Col. Clifford M. scattered snow flurries over the Ings and from five below to five
Meiss County Senior Cillzens.
and another was lost because of
Acree, 39; Chief Warrant Officer
eastern part of the state on abOve zero early Friday.
FWJel'lll services will be held on mechanical problems. In add!Guy L. Hunter, 46; and lt.
Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Ewing Funeral tlon, two Gls died accidentally Jeffrey N. Zaun, 28. All three had
Home wili) R~. Roger Grace when their bunker collapsed In
been listed by the Pentagon as
officialinJ. Burial will be in Letart Saudi Arabia.
·
missing In action.
.
FaUsCemetcry.
IraqsaldMondayltsent"more
Hunter was quoted as saying,
Dlllcetobebeld
ticipate.
Friends may call at the funeral than 20 captured a!Ued pilots to
"The war was crazy. .. . I
The Pomeroy Senior Citizens
home today from 6 to 9 p.lil.
"sclentttlc and civilian "lnstalla·
condemn the aggression against Dance Club will sponsa a dance
lions to be used as human shields.
peaceful Iraq." Zaun was quoted on Friday from 8-11 p.m. with
. SAR to 111eet
F.
" Because the scientific and
as saying, ''I think our leaders music by the Happy llollo'!V Boys
Ewings Chapter Sons of the
civilian centers are being t~F- · have wrongly attacked fhe . ·of Athens. Those auendlng bring American Revolution will meet · Marion F. Ebersbach, 81, -of S31 geted by the hostile air forces, It peaceful people of Iraq."
, snacks for the snack table. The
Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy, die(l · has been decided to deploy the
public is iilvited to attend.·
Sallll'day, Jan. 19, 1991,- 11 River· captured enemy pilots. who
· The · State Department 'd ell·
only will begili at
p.m. fo1·
side Melhodist Hospital in Colum- number more than 20, around vered a diplomatic note to Iraqi
lowed by the JlrOIPII and business
bus. Slle was a .retired school such centers," an Iraqi spokes- representatives saying the treatmeeting aa 7:30 p.m. Guesrs ancl in·
Holmes Safety Alsoclatlon
teaCher.
man said In a Baghdad Radio
ment of the almien Violated the
The next meeting of the taested individuals 1ft welcome. 10
She was born in Pomeroy on dispatch monitored In Cairo.
Geneva Convention and asked Southeastern Ohio Holmes Safety attend. Resen11li0Ds . must be
June
19®, die daugluer of the
The . spokesman did not dis- that the International Red Cross · Association District Council·will be ~ved DO larer thaD Tuesday, by
late George and Laura Hobbs close the nationalities of the have Immediate access to any held Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the calllng 992-7874.
EbersbaciL
captured pilots.
prisoners of war held bY Iraq.
The spcaka' for the eVening will
Royale Restaurant in Wellston.
. "She was active in die American
Cheney told Cable News NetPenl{lgon spokesman Edward
Dinner will begin at 7 _p.m. Col· be Michael Sbuble, Syracue. He is
· : Red Cross, the Meigs County work the administration has
Lundquist said the statements by lowed immediately ,by the business a ll8lionally blown ape•b* lnd
Senior Citizens Center and the " reason to bellevt-" three Amerl- the men appeared to have been meeting, with the election cif writeJ pn Webb berita8e- He will
Pomeroy United Met!todist Church. cans are being held by Iraq.
' made under pressure and added, officers for 1991.
be speaking on that topic.
.
She is survived by four nephews,
'The fact Is Iraq Is a signatory ' ' 'We are not confirming these are
The council is open to any Stile,
Discussion will be held on a
Howard s. EbersiiEh, Thomas A. to, the Geneva Convention on the Americans."
·
minier or allied industry, with the payment plan for life -~
Ebersbacll, and Llwrence s. treatment of prisoners," Cheney
"We have not seen the video;
sole objective to pevent injuries and a prepaid life membership 'for
Bbenbach; two nieces, Louanna said. "This would be a clearcut we have just heard the audio," he and f818lities, in : the mining in· minor sons, gransons, and nq&amp;ws
Wilcox and Carol Jacobs; three violation of the Geneva Conven- said. "They did not appear to me dustry. The families of officials and of S.A.It and D.A.R. members.
. lll\uld nephews, John L. Ebersbach, lion. It Is In effect a war crime to be speaking freely. They employees are encouraged to parSieven R. Ebersbach and Jeffrey J. and those' people who carry out appeared by me to be under a
Bbersbach; and a ·grand niece, those kinds of acts will be held great deal of duress. "
Linda Cozart.
accountable. "
.
The Pentagon said U.S. forces
She was pm:eded in death by
CNN. reported from Baghdad .. captured 23 Iraqi soldiers In a
two brothers, Clifford and Howard;
that seven captured airmen, who
weekend assault agalnstfortlfled
A Cheshire man was Injured In 124, .3 of a mile west of milepost
two sislm, Edith and Lydia; and a also Included two British flyers,
oil platforms In the Persian Gulf.
a one-truck crash Sunday at 1: 10 12, according to the Gallla·Melgs
niece,Jean Warner.
an Italian and an Kuwal tl, were . Four Iraq Is were reported killed.
p.m. In Rutland Township on S.R. Post of the State Highway Patrol.

Jraql.• •.•

aiM,_.,
.., _.,

Ill ...
eou... Slla'12
IIIII
••let
In ibe u.s. ,._, ... diDIOM traaa ron 011. ClliL
Locll.a
llicll

a

"

Grace Ellis .

the eastern half of the state:
tlon of temperatures Is expected
The weather service said tollil
Wednesday along with mol't!
storm accumulations will be In
snow. A reinforcing shot of arctic
the three- to six-Inch range over
air Is expected-by Thursday.
north central and northeast Oblo,
On the Monday morning
except up to one toot ot snow
weather map, low pressure was
along the eastern lakeshore area.
centered over New Jersey with a
aearlni skies are .expected
cold front from the Southwest
over most areas of the state
through Alabama. A secondary
Monday night, excepi In the · cold front was stretched across
northeaat where .variable clpuds
the Oblo Valley. Arctic high
and scattered fiurrles will con·
pressure was loc!lted over the
tt.nue. Monday njght tempera·
mid-section of the country.
lures will fall to range from 5
The low and cold front will
below zero to 5 abOve.
. move oft the East Coast Monday ·
Sunshine Is expected Tuesday, as the Ohio Valley front moves
with a few flurries lingering into Into the deep south and dlssl·
the early morning over extreme pates . The arctic high will build
northeast Ohio. Despite tbe sun· slowly east and reach western
shine, It will remain cold with Ohio Tuesday morning and move
highs from 15 to around 20.
off the East Coast Tuesday night.
It looks like the cold weather
Another cold front will move
wlli persist through much, _I f not. from SOUth· central Canada to the
all, of the week. Some mooera· ' upper Midwest by Tuesday ntgbt.

· Pllncia A. u • n, ,.,_ til
Mr.... lrfn,JillllkH.IIIIIIl, ....
. dleport, II• I a Id wttll Oilltll*a

.

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ftMIII
PI I •t• 1

.......

~~~U)I....UUTION ' '

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•
'

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.

. Page 8-1118 Daly 81 lllnel

........

•

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•

Monday, .-...ry 21, 1991:•J•

Pomerov-Midcleport. Ohio

LAFF-A·DAY

~

'

AllllULJ! ··- •'IP•'r~l-,

71

The Deily Sshtiu• Pigs 9

Television
Viewing

....... "·· --:...,::,.

1•,\I,'·IJOIIall. l

'

1

Pomaloy- Mickleport. Ohio

84 HlyAGreln
=...::.=::...:::...;;;.;;;;;__
•.

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/

•

Manday. ~ 21, 1991

,.'

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AUto. tor-

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.

.

3 AniiCIUftCIIIIema

0000

..

GOLD CRIDIT CAIID, -

.I

H 0 M NT

0 0 0

Overheard in line at movie
_
!heater: "Did you ever notice
lla that fools rush In, but they
' .
always seem to get the sets In ·

I 1 I' I
5

.....

...-.~-- - ­

--~--

· 11MU lniD i!11 1 - - IIIII

.··"

--;,;Y.;O:...:;.R,.:E:..··:,:.N~G::,.·-11 tGhe -C--om--p·,~-~· ~.· c•uc. kle A··--; .
· I~:-'....LI...~ yov dby....u;;;;
;; 11oe "..~...; .
1. ....~...1· 7 _IL-IL• • •
lop lrom liWP No. 3 bolaw.

~

A
9

..

PR INT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARE S

t·••

ICUM LITI ANSWIIJ
Tr~et- Exist ~ Nudge- Biceps - EXPIRED
My daughter had given me a couPQn f~ a days worth
of housework. When I tried to redeem tt t11e neid day,
she told me ~ had already EXPIRED!
·
·

•

.,

•oN-SITE SERVICE/ REPAIR
. . •CUSTOM PROGRAM~l~Ci
·. •sAtES
•ON-.SlTE CUSTOM TRAINING

'

~o~p

t:O•

-

SI'I.ING I'ALUY nolmSJON.U BUILDING
lG6 JACKSON liKE - sum 101
GAWPOUS, OHIO 4HJI

(614) 446-6000

;~ · At.Pf'fAlfT

Employm r•tll

·'

S('tV ICCS

......
•••••n

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'

1-z.1

e, , .. 1 br trtiA.Inl.

ALLEY OOP

X-roy Ylaion would simplify the defenae of four heart.l. West would lead
aee mh ljl8de, nffed by East. East
would play aee IDtf'a club, aad West
'wouJd·wlD the club k1q and C)ve Eut
aaotber ruff..Down two.
Slace West could not look through
tbe backs of the cards, he made the
normal . lead of tbe diamond jack.
Proper .•icnall~g from lbal poinlljill
eaabled the defenae 10 prevail.
Eut played a diJcouraging three of
diamoadl on tbe opening lead. Declarer won the ace, played a heart to dummy's 10 and euhecl the king of hearts,
Eut followiDg with tbe deuce and then
tbe - · In lbe defelllive methods
illlld by Eut, be would have bigblond Ia lrwnps if be bad held three of
llleal. Declarer DOW led a ·spade bac~
to bll klDI· Welt held off but Willi tbe
nest spade u Eut discarded the diaIIIOIId four.
It was now apparent that East held
tbe club ace. (Witbout 11. Eut would
bave thrown a low club to let West
· .know.there was no future there.) But a
special defe~~~e
still required. If
West led a. low club, declarer would
play low from dll!MIY and Eut would
bave to take tbe ace, eventually maklllg tbe queen of clubs
dummy a

wu

in

wlDner. ·

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EAST

WEST

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4oi075
Vulnerable: Eut·West
Dealer: West
WHt
Puo
4t

Ner..

Put
4.

,
•·

But
St
Allpuo

Opening lead: • J

Instead West switched 10 ~ club
jack. South was now belplea; If be
covered with "dummy's queen, Eut
would tate the aee and lead back
througb declarer's 10-7 10 ttCOre three
tricks Ia clubs. If be ducked Ia datnmy,
East ..td play low also, aad tbe defenden would eoatlaue clubs wllb lbe
same reiult.

;
•
:
.
•
;

CROSSWORD
KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING
.•• Hawt (liE ial• Our lecatiOII r a
I 'It Miles lost ... lt. 241 throllflh
O...tw, Oh. '

,SPECIALIZING IN ... ,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Rc.11 Estate

·31. HomM tor Sale

·

•C.-tom Iaiit Exhouat SyatMf~l
•Complete Une of Exhou.t Supplle1
•Hendll end lnltoll Monroe Shocks
Come ud 8ee ·t1a For A Jl'ree IMpeetlea

Y'£SSIR.. -

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OL' LUKEY GOT HIS
PAS6EL
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D' TIME II
MAil,.~ORDER

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lnelrumenta

33 Fanna for Sale

. GROOM

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find it. The Allro-Greph Mlllc:hmaker · LIO (.lulr 21-AUO. 12) Don't ... lhe
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mektt, clo lhll IIIIOIIfll*, P.O. lox c:ontront tile INnQI you lelr, yau'lllnd

ASTRO-GRAPH

no1Nn0 bU! ,.._,, 01 your
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whO- re1ume what Ia bon-Oiled. II manlf .... otltan Into •wing your
you .... firm.-, yau _ , ,... '!'Uflkl p..-p
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.
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your ,..ration today II othln 1*8 Ia an 1111mn111e ~ltoitttiCIIt, IIIII·
you • too ML11srtllig. You .._ ot.dlllaitw 11111a1 no mumttra

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In regard to your eocial liMitvWIMI.. litis Ia lllal lltd good, pnlfldad you're

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today ~ Nlllaltllll • prior mlataka . IUftlllldeW, Aglttda 11ti111 Ollltla nan

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wal enough Ilona In your COiilttwdll eocial Wo$11 01'1 - t ~npoi11111, but
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llummar by meklng uroteciLSLIIY ' plnnd w1t1t tile trend 01 - " ·

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DUQUJ
.
y ....,..,., CrnttotpiOtel DO SOMETI-IING FOR
tHE JOY OF DOING IT AND PRAY YOU WON"T BE
PUNISHED. - SAMMY CAHN ·

ChitngM.

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,ACROSS
score to
1 Second • DOWN
cosmo- ·
1 Marble
naut
2 World
6 Following
labor grp.
11 Slill
· 3 Comij;
k'ICking
Conway
.12 "Swell!"
. 4 Had a
13 Alcott's
coup
"Little - •
5 Pl11ce
14J.R
6 Tiny
20 Computer 34 Pavarolli,
Ewing, for
workers'
one
home
screen
e.g.
15 Go swiftly · 7 Doctor's
image ·
35Pub
17 ·-a
charge
21 "J'Acbrews
36Grime
- Wonderful B Prepare
cusa"
Life"
lor takeoff
aulhor • 37"1 cannbt
.
'
18 Formal
9 Coup d'- 24 Ellipse
tell-"
wear
10 Ely and
25 Trucking 40 Super
Howard
rig
22 APiece
serve
· 421ota
23 Nearly
16 Depot
26 Corner
27 Stash
(abbr.)
28 Highly ·
43 Eden
away
18 Sunset
moral
evictee
44 Con29 Internal
sne
3.1 Transducted
organ
19 Despise
gression
30 Beliefs
,..-.,......,....-or-,.-32 Feeble,
as an
excuse
33 Tactful
- mistrulh
35Nabokov
novel
380on
1-.
Juan's
mom
39fragranl
.' flower
. 41 Explosive .
inventor
45 Writer
Jong
4&amp;·Martini
garnish
47 Pi!tsburgh
output
4SGavea
1121

•

•••
'•
•

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